Flavin Mononucleotide
Subject
Subject Source: Unspecified ingested source
Found in 3 Collections and/or Records:
Electron-Transfer Reactions between Flavodoxin Semiquinone and c-Type Cytochromes: Comparisons between Various Flavodoxins, by Cheddar, Meyer, Cusanovich, Stout, and Tollin, 1986
Item — Box CP18, Folder: 35
Identifier: SB_1_1_744_105
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
1986
Elucidation of the factors which determine reaction-rate constants and biological specificity for electron-transfer proteins, by G. Tollin, T. Meyer, and M. Cusanovich, 1986
Item — Box CP18, Folder: 35
Identifier: SB_1_1_744_84
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
1986
Kinetics of Electron Transfer between Cytochromes c3 and the Semiquinones of Free Flavin and Clostridial Flavodoxin, by Meyer, Cheddar, Bartsch, Getzoff, Cusanovich, and Tollin, 1986
Item — Box CP18, Folder: 35
Identifier: SB_1_1_744_97
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
1986