Nikola pavletich biography
- Nikola Pavletich.
- Pavletich uses X-ray crystallography to map the three-dimensional shape of the molecular components that control cell growth.
- Nikola Panayot Pavletich is the former chair of structural biology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
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Nikola P. Pavletich
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Structural Biology
Edited by : Neeraja Sankaran
Y. Cho, S. Gorina, P.D. Jeffrey, N.P. Pavletich, "Crystal structure of a p53 tumor suppressor-DNA complex: understanding tumorigenic mutations," Science, 265:346-55, 1994. (Cited in more than 140 publications through November 1995)
Comments by Nikola Pavletich, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York City
"One of the goals in cancer biology has been to find a unifying theme underlying the cause of cancer, and the p53 tumor suppressor is the closest we have come to that," declares Nikola Pavletich, an assistant member in the cellular biochemistry and biophysics program at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
"Because it is the most frequently mutated gene to be identified in triggering many different human cancers, p53 has been the focus of intense research. This paper is the first description of the three-dimensional atomic structure of p53 bound to a DNA molecule," he adds, proposing this as the main ...
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Nikola Pavletich
Naseer Rajput
Nikola Panayot Pavletich is the former chair of structural biology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.[1]
Education
Pavletich received his BS in chemistry from Caltech in 1988 and his PhD in molecular biology and genetics from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1991.[2] He did a postdoc at MIT with Carl Pabo.
Career
He joined the faculty at Sloan Kettering in 1993 and was named chair of the Structural Biology Program in 2003.[3] He has been an HHMI investigator since 1997.
His laboratory researches malignant cell growth and DNA damage contributing to the development of cancer. DNA damage repair is a significant factor in whether a cell will become cancerous after genetic insult. Some of his major focuses have been the mTOR pathway and BRCA1. His lab uses x-ray crystallography to determine how proteins interact.[4][3]
Awards
References
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