October 2011
Volume 43, Number 10
The October issue of American Laboratory offers insight into the power of pulsed amperometric detection coupled with chromatography. Also in this issue: Biomarker discovery can benefit greatly from an integrated data analysis system.
View Issue Archives » Subscribe »
Table of Contents
Robert L. Stevenson, Ph.D.
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Society has invested tens of billions
of dollars in the last two
decades to sequence the human
genome and look for biomarkers
to fight disease and guide therapy.
read more
Ying Jiang Xu, Xiu Hui Tian, Xiu Zhen Zhang, Xiang Hong Gong, Shi Juan Zhang, Hui Hui Liu, Li Min Zhang
Hormones, such as androgens (AS), estrogens (ES), and progestogens (PS), play an important role in organisms. AS, the main male sex steroids,which are the critical factors responsible
for the ...
read more
Michelle Chen
Saturday, October 01, 2011
PEGylation involves covalent
attachment of synthetic polyethylene
glycol (PEG) chains to another
molecule, usually a protein, peptide,
or nucleotide.
read more
Jaap de Zeeuw, Rick Morehead, Tom Vezza, Bill Bromps
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Alumina porous layer open tubular
(PLOT) columns have long been used for the analysis of volatile hydrocarbons.
read more
George Limpert
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Most chemists vaguely remember a portion of their instrumental analysis course that covered electroanalytical chemistry.
read more
Jaime Sabel
Saturday, October 01, 2011
In the human body, undifferentiated
stem cells are the raw material
used to repopulate tissues and
organs in response to accidental
cell death or normal cell turnover.
read more
Barbara Foster
Saturday, October 01, 2011
From the dramatic increase in new
fluorophores to the proliferation
of techniques like total internal
reflection fluorescence (TIRF),
photoactivated localization microscopy
(PALM), and stochastic...
read more
Jens Hoefkens
Saturday, October 01, 2011
The genomic revolution of the last
two decades has provided pharmaceutical
companies with an almost overwhelming number of potential drug targets.
read more
David Coleman, Lynn Vanatta
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Imagine that a new method has been
developed and now needs a calibration
curve.
read more