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Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry

 

Professor of Biological and Biomedical Chemistry

What we do...

Our research focusses on the molecular structure of biological tissues.  The bulk of structural tissues such as bone, muscle, tendon and skin, is the so-called extracellular matrix.  This extracellular material gives the tissue its essential mechanical properties, for instance the stiffness and toughness of bone, the elasticity of skin.  The molecular structure of the extracellular matrix is complex and subject to equally complex chemistry on a daily basis.  This leads to structural changes, which in ageing, in diseases such as cancer and degenerative diseases like osteoarthritis can be substantial.  Cells take their cues from the molecular structure of the extracellular matrix that surrounds them, and so their behaviour changes when the extracellular matrix structure changes.  This results in aberrant cell behaviour in cancer for instance, and imperfect tissue repair after damage in ageing.

The major paradigm in our research is that normal cell behaviour can be restored by restoring normal extracellular matrix structure. Our work aims to generate the understanding needed to drive development of new therapeutics for degenerative diseases.

You can read more about our research here.

We are funded by... 

The European Research Council, the Medcical Research Council, the British Heart Foundation, Cycle Pharmaceuticals and Cambridge Oncology.

Watch Professor Melinda Duer discuss her research

Take a two-minute tour of the Duer Lab

Publications

ChemInform Abstract: Ligand Fields from Misdirected Valency. Part 2. Bent Bonding in Copper(II) Acetylacetonates.
RJ DEETH, MJ DUER, M GERLOCH
– ChemInform
(2016)
18,
no
Tuning hardness in calcite by incorporation of amino acids
Y-Y Kim, JD Carloni, B Demarchi, D Sparks, DG Reid, ME Kunitake, CC Tang, MJ Duer, CL Freeman, B Pokroy, K Penkman, JH Harding, LA Estroff, SP Baker, FC Meldrum
– Nature Materials
(2016)
15,
903
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy fingerprinting of tissues allows detailed analysis of glycation reactions
MJ Duer, R Rajan, WY Chow, DG Reid, KH Muller, JN Skepper, CM Shanahan, RA Brooks
– INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY
(2016)
97,
A7
Preparation of highly and generally enriched mammalian tissues for solid state NMR.
VWC Wong, DG Reid, WY Chow, R Rajan, M Green, RA Brooks, MJ Duer
– Journal of biomolecular NMR
(2015)
63,
119
Hydroxyproline Ring Pucker Causes Frustration of Helix Parameters in the Collagen Triple Helix.
WY Chow, D Bihan, CJ Forman, DA Slatter, DG Reid, DJ Wales, RW Farndale, MJ Duer
– Sci Rep
(2015)
5,
12556
The contribution of solid-state NMR spectroscopy to understanding biomineralization: atomic and molecular structure of bone.
MJ Duer
– J Magn Reson
(2015)
253,
98
Collagen labelling with an azide-proline chemical reporter in live cells.
B Amgarten, R Rajan, N Martínez-Sáez, BL Oliveira, IS Albuquerque, RA Brooks, DG Reid, MJ Duer, GJL Bernardes
– Chem Commun (Camb)
(2015)
51,
5250
NMR spectroscopy of native and in vitro tissues implicates polyADP ribose in biomineralization.
WY Chow, R Rajan, KH Muller, DG Reid, JN Skepper, WC Wong, RA Brooks, M Green, D Bihan, RW Farndale, DA Slatter, CM Shanahan, MJ Duer
– Science
(2014)
344,
742
Citrate bridges between mineral platelets in bone.
E Davies, KH Müller, WC Wong, CJ Pickard, DG Reid, JN Skepper, MJ Duer
– Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
(2014)
111,
E1354
A new glycation product 'norpronyl-lysine,' and direct characterization of cross linking and other glycation adducts: NMR of model compounds and collagen.
PTB Bullock, DG Reid, W Ying Chow, WPW Lau, MJ Duer
– Biosci Rep
(2014)
34,
e00096
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Research Group

Research Interest Groups

Telephone number

01223 336483
01223 763934 (shared)

Email address

mjd13@cam.ac.uk