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C. Russell Middaugh

Researcher at University of Kansas

Publications -  297
Citations -  12886

C. Russell Middaugh is an academic researcher from University of Kansas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Circular dichroism & Protein structure. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 293 publications receiving 11726 citations.

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Book ChapterDOI

Ultraviolet absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy of nonviral gene delivery complexes.

TL;DR: Applications of derivative absorbance spectroscopy to the analysis of nucleic acid-cationic polymer complexes and of the complementary absorptive technique of circular dichroism in the same context are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural stability of hepatitis C virus envelope glycoprotein E1: Effect of pH and dissociative detergents

TL;DR: The results from this study provide detailed information that will help guide the future development of E1-based HCV vaccines and indicate that E1y particles are most stable at pH 7 and 8 under the given experimental conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aggregation Kinetics of Recombinant Human FVIII (rFVIII)

TL;DR: Analysis of the data suggested that under the experimental conditions used in this study, the rate-controlling step in the aggregation of rFVIII may be a unimolecular reaction involving conformational changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A single aromatic core mutation converts a designed “primitive” protein from halophile to mesophile folding

TL;DR: The results indicate that a single aromatic amino acid substitution is capable of eliminating the requirement of halophile conditions for folding of a “primitive” polypeptide, indicating that a critical halophile‐to‐mesophile protein folding adaptation was facilitated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking the solution viscosity of an IgG2 monoclonal antibody to its structure as a function of pH and temperature.

TL;DR: Results suggest: (1) ANS can be an important measure of the overall structure and (2) hydrophobic interactions and charge-charge interactions are the two major physical factors that contribute collectively to the high viscosity of concentrated IgG solutions.