Drug discovery has traditionally been a reductive process—narrowing down, filtering out, and optimizing within established ...
Drug discovery is like molecular Tetris. Chemists snap atoms together, adjusting the pieces until everything fits, and suddenly, a molecule makes a promising new medicine. Normally, creating better ...
A collaborative effort between Meta, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory leverages Los Alamos' expertise in building tools for molecular screening capabilities.
Sandwich compounds are special chemical compounds used as basic building blocks in organometallic chemistry. So far, their structure has always been linear. Recently, researchers made stacked sandwich ...
Robots are now doing what once took chemists months, building potential antibiotics in days as drug resistance tightens its grip on the world. In a striking demonstration of automated chemistry, ...
3D bio-printed liver model and high-content imaging for evaluating the toxicity effects of compounds
The effectiveness of non-clinical drug safety predictions is enhanced by the adoption of three-dimensional (3D) cellular models. 3D bioprinting enables the generation of complex models with spatial ...
A paper about heteroligand complexes of copper was published in Russian Journal of General Chemistry. Studies of metal complexes with organic ligands at Kazan Federal University were initiated back in ...
Sandwich complexes were developed about 70 years ago and have a sandwich-like structure. Two flat aromatic organic rings (the “slices of bread”) are filled with a single, central metal atom in between ...
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