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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

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, WY Chow, WPW Lau, MJ Duer
– Bioscience Reports
(2014)
34,
81
Dehydration and crystallization of amorphous calcium carbonate in solution and in air
J Ihli, WC Wong, EH Noel, Y-Y Kim, AN Kulak, HK Christenson, MJ Duer, FC Meldrum
– Nature communications
(2014)
5,
3169
Solid-state NMR spectroscopy: A tool for molecular-level structure analysis and dynamics
MJ Duer
(2014)
153
The effect of particle agglomeration on the formation of a surface-connected compartment induced by hydroxyapatite nanoparticles inhuman monocyte-derived macrophages
KH Müller, M Motskin, AJ Philpott, AF Routh, CM Shanahan, MJ Duer, JN Skepper
– Biomaterials
(2014)
35,
1074
Bone mineralization: Water brings order
M Duer, A Veis
– Nature materials
(2013)
12,
1081
The effect of particle agglomeration on the formation of a surface-connected compartment induced by hydroxyapatite nanoparticles in human monocyte-derived macrophages
KH Müller, M Motskin, AJ Philpott, AF Routh, CM Shanahan, MJ Duer, JN Skepper
– Biomaterials
(2013)
35,
1074
The curious case of (caffeine)·(benzoic acid): How heteronuclear seeding allowed the formation of an elusive cocrystal
DK Bučar, GM Day, I Halasz, GGZ Zhang, JRG Sander, DG Reid, LR MacGillivray, MJ Duer, W Jones
– Chemical Science
(2013)
4,
4417
Citrate occurs widely in healthy and pathological apatitic biomineral: mineralized articular cartilage, and intimal atherosclerotic plaque and apatitic kidney stones.
DG Reid, MJ Duer, GE Jackson, RC Murray, AL Rodgers, CM Shanahan
– Calcified Tissue International
(2013)
93,
1
Applications of NMR crystallography to problems in biomineralization: refinement of the crystal structure and 31P solid-state NMR spectral assignment of octacalcium phosphate.
E Davies, MJ Duer, SE Ashbrook, JM Griffin
– Journal of the American Chemical Society
(2012)
134,
12508
Lipids in biocalcification: contrasts and similarities between intimal and medial vascular calcification and bone by NMR
DG Reid, CM Shanahan, MJ Duer, LG Arroyo, M Schoppet, RA Brooks, RC Murray
– J Lipid Res
(2012)
53,
1569
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Research Group

Research Interest Groups

Telephone number

01223 336483
01223 763934 (shared)

Email address

mjd13@cam.ac.uk