Find us On Facebook Twitter
News
news and events Events Energy Lectures Sustainability 2011 Sustainability 2010 Sustainability 2009 White Symposium Whiting Turner Lectures Current News News Archives Search News Press Coverage Press Releases Research Newsroom RSS feed Events Calendar events events

News Story

Current Headlines

Alumna Florence Tan of NASA to Deliver Commencement Speech May 20

36 Clark School Students Accepted into NIST Summer Research Program

Eta Kappa Nu Wins 2011-2012 Outstanding Chapter Award

UMD's Gamera Team Receives Support from Maryland Space Business Roundtable

Clark School Student Wins "Code for Community Challenge"

Goldsman and Peckerar Win Inaugural University System of Maryland Entrepreneurship Award

Clark School Freshmen Compete in Hovercraft Competition

Marcus Selected as Poole and Kent Senior Faculty Teaching Award Recipient

X-51A Waverider Achieves Hypersonic Breakthrough

Pack Receives "Champion of Change" Award from White House

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search Clark School News

Research Newsroom

Press Releases

Archived News

Magazines and Publications

Press Coverage

Clark School RSS Feed

Events Resources

Clark School Events

Events Calendar

Bookmark and Share

$1.9M NSF Grant Enables Study of Biomolecular Structures

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering assistant professor Ganesh Sriram is a co-PI on a project that has received a $1.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation to acquire a superconducting 800 MHz Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectrometer that will help scientists and engineers solve complex problems in biology and medicine. The instrument will be the highest field NMR spectrometer located on the College Park campus and will enable scientists to investigate the three-dimensional structure of biological molecules and study their interactions with a degree of resolution and sensitivity not previously possible.

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.

For More Information:

Visit Professor Sriram's web site »

Related Articles:
A Tree in Your Tank?

August 30, 2010


Prev   Next