$1.9M NSF Grant Enables Study of Biomolecular Structures
August 30, 2010
Sriram's collaborators on the project include its PI, Associate Professor Kwaku Dayie, and co-PIs Professor David Fushman and Assistant Professor Vitali Tugarinov, all from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
"The new, higher resolution instrument will enable us to measure isotopes more accurately, and thereby accelerate our understanding of metabolic pathways," explains Sriram. "In my research group, we use NMR technology to quantify metabolic pathways in plants or other organisms that might be used to produce biofuels or pharmaceuticals."
Sriram expects the NMR spectrometer to be used in several of his ongoing research projects, including one that seeks to optimize the growth cycle of poplar trees in order to turn them into a plentiful and renewable crop used for the production of ethanol.
The new spectrometer will strengthen 15 research programs working in several departments throughout the university, as well as in the new Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology Research (IBBR), where a number of Clark School faculty hold joint and affiliate appointments.
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