Journal home
Advance online publication
Current issue
Archive
Press releases
Supplements
Focus
Guide to authors
Online submissionOnline submission
Permissions
For referees
Free online issue
Contact the journal
Subscribe
Advertising
work@npg
naturereprints
About this site
For librarians
 
NPG Resources
Nature
Nature Cell Biology
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
The EMBO Journal
Nature Reports Avian Flu
NPG Subject areas
Biotechnology
Cancer
Chemistry
Clinical Medicine
Dentistry
Development
Drug Discovery
Earth Sciences
Evolution & Ecology
Genetics
Immunology
Materials Science
Medical Research
Microbiology
Molecular Cell Biology
Neuroscience
Pharmacology
Physics
Browse all publications
News and Views
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology  12, 739 - 740 (2005)
doi:10.1038/nsmb0905-739

A four-dimensional structure of T4 infection

Bentley A Fane

The author is in the Department of Veterinary Sciences and Microbiology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, 85721-0090. bfane@u.arizona.edu

Biochemical and genetic data defining the assembly pathway and structural biology of the T4 tail apparatus are merging to create a four-dimensional image reconstruction. Human inventions seem to be large-scale replicas of molecular devices honed by evolution.

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.

 Top
Abstract
Previous | Next
Table of contents
Full textFull text
Download PDFDownload PDF
Send to a friendSend to a friend
Save this linkSave this link

Open Innovation Challenges

naturejobs

Figures & Tables
See also: Article by Kostyuchenko et al.
Export citation
natureproducts

Search buyers guide:

 
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
ISSN: 1545-9993
EISSN: 1545-9985
Journal home | Advance online publication | Current issue | Archive | Press releases | Supplements | For authors | Online submission | Permissions | For referees | Free online issue | About the journal | Contact the journal | Subscribe | Advertising | work@npg | naturereprints | About this site | For librarians
Nature Publishing Group, publisher of Nature, and other science journals and reference works©2005 Nature Publishing Group | Privacy policy