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Adam R. Urbach

Researcher at Trinity University

Publications -  36
Citations -  3372

Adam R. Urbach is an academic researcher from Trinity University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Molecular recognition & Peptide. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 35 publications receiving 3006 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam R. Urbach include California Institute of Technology & University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Carbonic Anhydrase as a Model for Biophysical and Physical-Organic Studies of Proteins and Protein–Ligand Binding

TL;DR: Carbonic anhydrase is a protein that is especially well-suited to serve as a model in many types of studies in biophysics, bioanalysis, the physical-organic chemistry of inhibitor design, and medicinal chemistry.
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Charge-mediated recognition of N-terminal tryptophan in aqueous solution by a synthetic host.

TL;DR: Analysis of the nine indole-containing compounds suggests that peptide recognition is mediated by the electrostatic charge(s) proximal to the indole, and that the mode of binding is consistent for these compounds.
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Sequence-specific recognition and cooperative dimerization of N-terminal aromatic peptides in aqueous solution by a synthetic host.

TL;DR: The peptide sequence selectivity and positively cooperative dimerization reported here are, to the best of the authors' knowledge, unprecedented for synthetic hosts in aqueous solution.
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Molecular recognition of insulin by a synthetic receptor.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that site-selective recognition is based on the properties inherent to a protein terminus, including the unique chemical epitope presented by the terminal residue and the greater freedom of the terminus to unfold, like the end of a ball of string, to accommodate binding.
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Three-Dimensional Self-Assembly of Metallic Rods with Submicron Diameters Using Magnetic Interactions

TL;DR: This work provides a simple demonstration that magnetic interactions between ferromagnetic objects can direct and stabilize the formation of ordered, 3D structures by self-assembly.