Daniel Branton
award received: Guggenheim Fellowship
official website: www.mcb.harvard.edu/directory/daniel-branton
Articles 55
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Fracture faces of frozen membranes: 50th anniversary.
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Author response to John Kasianowicz and Sergey Bezrukov
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Three decades of nanopore sequencing.
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Molecule-hugging graphene nanopores
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Nanopatterning on nonplanar and fragile substrates with ice resists
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An ice lithography instrument
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Graphene as a subnanometre trans-electrode membrane
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Climate change and the integrity of science
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Ice lithography for nanodevices
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Base dependent DNA-carbon nanotube interactions: activation enthalpies and assembly-disassembly control
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The potential and challenges of nanopore sequencing
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The potential and challenges of nanopore sequencing
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DNA conformation and base number simultaneously determined in a nanopore
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Focused ion beam induced deflections of freestanding thin films
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Eddies in a bottleneck: an arbitrary Debye length theory for capillary electroosmosis
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Nanometer patterning with ice.
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DNA heterogeneity and phosphorylation unveiled by single-molecule electrophoresis
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PROBING SINGLE DNA MOLECULE TRANSPORT USING FABRICATED NANOPORES
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Atomic Layer Deposition to Fine-Tune the Surface Properties and Diameters of Fabricated Nanopores
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Characterization of nucleic acids by nanopore analysis
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Voltage-Driven DNA Translocations through a Nanopore
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Characterization of PDZ-binding kinase, a mitotic kinase
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Microsecond time-scale discrimination among polycytidylic acid, polyadenylic acid, and polyuridylic acid as homopolymers or as segments within single RNA molecules
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Adapting to nanoscale events
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Motifs involved in interchain binding at the tail-end of spectrin.
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Two independent domains of hDlg are sufficient for subcellular targeting: the PDZ1-2 conformational unit and an alternatively spliced domain
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Characterization of individual polynucleotide molecules using a membrane channel
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Solution structure of the pleckstrin homology domain of Drosophila beta-spectrin
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Identification of the protein 4.1 binding interface on glycophorin C and p55, a homologue of the Drosophila discs-large tumor suppressor protein
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Drosophila development requires spectrin network formation
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Cloning and characterization of hdlg: the human homologue of the Drosophila discs large tumor suppressor binds to protein 4.1
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In vitro binding studies suggest a membrane-associated complex between erythroid p55, protein 4.1, and glycophorin C.
Human - wd:Q60041700