Mark Roe
University of Sussex
7 Papers
5 Citations
Mark Roe is an academic researcher from University of Sussex. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Heat shock. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Dihydropyridines allosterically modulate Hsp90 providing a novel mechanism for heat shock protein co-induction and neuroprotection
TL;DR: It is concluded, that binding compromises Hsp90's ability to chaperone, by modulating its ATPase activity, which consequently induces the HSR in diseased cells, which represents the mechanism by which the normalization of neurofibrillary tangles, preservation of neurons, reduced tau pathology, reduced amyloid plaque, and increased dendritic spine density in the APPxPS1 Alzheimer's mouse model is initiated.
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Decarboxylative Bromination of Heteroarenes: Initial Mechanistic Insights
TL;DR: Evidence from this mechanistic investigation suggests that metal-free decarboxylative halogenation of various azaheteroarenes occurs via a radical pathway, with 1H NMR studies suggesting that the acidic substrates activate NBS.
Expression, purification and preliminary X-ray analysis of the BRCT domain from Rhp9/Crb2
John A. Hinks,Mark Roe,Jenny C. Y. Ho,Felicity Z. Watts,John P. Phelan,M McAllister,Laurence H. Pearl +6 more
TL;DR: The BRCT domain from Rhp9 (a Schizosaccharomyces pombe DNA-damage checkpoint protein) has been expressed, purified and crystallized, and concentration of the protein was achieved by exploiting this information.
Synthesis of novel heteroleptic delocalised cationic pyrazole gold complexes as potent HepG2 cytotoxic agents
Fatai Afolabi,Wided Souissi,Guillaume Riviere,Clement Lemaitre,Mark Roe,Neil Crickmore,Eddy M. E. Viseux +6 more
TL;DR: Results of cell viability assays show that these novel cationic gold(i) pyrazole complexes have good cytotoxic properties against the human HepG2 cancer cell line.