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Veronica L. Li

Stanford University - Department of Chemistry

Stanford, CA 94305

United States

SCHOLARLY PAPERS

2

DOWNLOADS

57

TOTAL CITATIONS

0

Scholarly Papers (2)

1.

Mixed Alkyl/Aryl Phosphonates Identify Metabolic Serine Hydrolases as Antimalarial Targets

Number of pages: 59 Posted: 12 Jan 2024
Stanford University - Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, Stanford University - Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois at Chicago - Department of Chemistry, The Francis Crick Institute, Columbia University, Stanford University - Department of Chemistry, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) - Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Stanford University - Department of Chemistry, Stanford University - Department of Pathology, The Francis Crick Institute, University of Illinois at Chicago - Department of Chemistry, Stanford University - Department of Biochemistry, Columbia University - Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Stanford University - Department of Pathology
Downloads 36 (1,236,159)

Abstract:

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Plasmodium, activity-based probes, serine hydrolases, lipid metabolism

2.

A Screen of Covalent Inhibitors In  Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Identifies Serine Hydrolases Involved in Lipid Metabolism as Potential Therapeutic Targets

Number of pages: 43 Posted: 09 Jun 2021
Stanford University - Department of Pathology, Stanford University - Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University - Department of Genetics, Stanford University - Department of Chemistry, Stanford University - Department of PathologyJohns Hopkins University - Department of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry, Stanford University - Divisions of Hematology and Blood & Marrow Transplantation, Stanford University - Department of Pathology, Stanford University - Department of Genetics, Stanford University - Department of Pathology and Stanford University - Department of Pathology
Downloads 21 (1,436,435)

Abstract:

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Activity-based protein profiling, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Serine hydrolases, Lipases, Lipidomics