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J S Milne

Researcher at University of Pennsylvania

Publications -  6
Citations -  2462

J S Milne is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Peptide & Peptide sequence. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 2350 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Primary Structure Effects on Peptide Group Hydrogen Exchange

TL;DR: The results provide the information necessary to evaluate measured protein NH to ND exchange rates by comparing them with rates to be expected for the same amino acid sequence is unstructured aligo‐ and polypeptides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein stability parameters measured by hydrogen exchange

TL;DR: The hydrogen exchange (HX) rates of the slowest peptide group NH hydrogens in oxidized cytochrome c (equine) are controlled by the transient global unfolding equilibrium and can be measured by one‐dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance and used to determine the thermodynamic parameters of global unfolding at mild solution conditions well below the melting transition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of protein hydrogen exchange studied in equine cytochrome c.

TL;DR: It appears that the transient structural fluctuation necessary to bring an exchangeable hydrogen into H‐bonding contact with the H‐exchange catalyst (OH−‐ion) involves a fairly large separation of theH‐bond donor and acceptor, several angstroms at least, and therefore depends on the relative resistance to distortion of immediately neighboring structure.
Book ChapterDOI

Thermodynamic parameters from hydrogen exchange measurements.

TL;DR: Results with the hemoglobin system demonstrate the ability of HX methods to locate functionally important changes in a protein and to measure the energetic contribution of each and offer the promise that HX measurements may be used to delineate, in terms of definable bonds and their energies and interactions, the network of interactions that Hb and other proteins use to produce their various functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental study of the protein folding landscape: unfolding reactions in cytochrome c.

TL;DR: The partially unfolded forms (PUFs) observed are few and discrete, evidently because they are produced by the reversible unfolding of the protein's several intrinsically cooperative secondary structural elements, and robust because the structural elements do not change over a wide range of conditions.