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  1. Bin Wu is a researcher at Johns Hopkins University who studies gene expression using single molecule imaging and spectroscopy. He is interested in visualizing and manipulating the birth, trafficking, translation and decay of RNA molecules in live cells and tissue.

  2. Assoc Prof Wu Bin. Associate Professor, School of Biological Sciences. Email. wubin@ntu.edu.sg. Keywords. Controlled Keywords. Biomedical Sciences & Life Sciences Structural Biology. User Keywords (optional) Magnetics for Energy. Biography.

  3. Wu Bins lab. DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCH WORK. Structural characterization of filamentous protein complexes using helical reconstruction of cryo-EM images. Death Domain oligomers, protein/nucleic acid oligomers, etc. Structure based development of novel biotechnological tools.

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  4. research.a-star.edu.sg › researcher › bin-wuBin Wu - A*STAR Research

    Jun 14, 2019 · Bin Wu. Assistant Professor. Nanyang Technological University. Share. Bin Wu obtained his PhD degree in biochemistry, biophysics and structural biology from the School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU), in 2006.

  5. Bin Wu. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, University of Minnesota. Verified email at jhmi.edu - Homepage. RNA single-molecule biophysics translation neuroscience. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title. Cited by.

  6. RIG-I forms signaling-competent filaments in an ATP-dependent, ubiquitin-independent manner. A Peisley, B Wu, H Yao, T Walz, S Hur. Molecular cell 51 (5), 573-583. , 2013. 250. 2013. Molecular imprinting as a signal-activation mechanism of the viral RNA sensor RIG-I.

  7. Soft hyaluronic gels promote cell spreading, stress fibers, focal adhesion, and membrane tension by phosphoinositide signaling, not traction force. K Mandal, D Raz-Ben Aroush, ZT Graber, B Wu, CY...