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Montana Molecular News

 

2013 SLAS Asia Conference

  Bozeman, Montana April 15, 2013 Montana Molecular has been invited to present at the Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening 2013 SLAS Asia Conference scheduled for June 5-7 in Shanghai, China. The selection committee extended the invitation...

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mNeon lights up life

  A small fishlike invertebrate with a big name Branchiostoma lanceolatum is suddenly in the limelight for engendering the best and the brightest: the mNeon fluorescent protein. Nathan Shaner and his colleagues at Allele Biotechnology and Florida State...

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NSF Funds Montana Molecular

NSF Funds Montana Molecular BOZEMAN, MT- Montana Molecular received  a new notice of award for a Small Business Innovation Research grant from the National Science Foundation. According to Anne Marie Quinn, the Principal Investigator for the project and...

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Montana Molecular SLAS Award Finalist

Montana Molecular SLAS Innovation Award Finalist The annual SLAS Innovation of the Year Award recognizes extraordinary achievement in innovative laboratory science. Out of more than 70 applicants, Montana Molecular's own Thom Hughes was...

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Montana Molecular Presents new GPCR assays at SLAS

Multiplex GPCR assays Please join us in Orlando on January 14, 2013 at the annual  Society for Lab Automation and Screening conference. Montana Molecular will present, "A multiplexed fluorescent assay for independent second messenger systems: Decoding GPCR...

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Jay Neitz inspires

  One of Montana's own native sons, Jay Neitz, an MSU graduate and now the Bishop Endowed Professor in Ophthalmology at University of Washington Medical School, returned to Bozeman this week to inspire us with a breathtaking report from the field of...

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2012 Nobel prize for GPCR studies

2012 Nobel Prize Congratulations to Bob Lefkowitz and his one-time student Brian Kobilka for winning this year's 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry! Not only did these laureates do groundbreaking work on the beta adrenergic receptor, but they have...

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Sensing voltage on Electric Peak

Made in Montana, Electric Peak is the fastest genetically encoded voltage sensor to date, and is brought to you by Thom Hughes' Lab at Montana State University.

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