BA, Chemistry, University of Guam, 1980.
PhD, Biochemistry, Rice University, 1988.
here for the fun of it :>

Things I may have contributed to:

Actinium
adenosine monophosphate
adenosine triphosphate
allosteric
anhydride
arsphenamine
ATP synthase
azeotrope
bastnasite
beaker
Belousov-Zhabotinskii reaction
bicarbonate
celluloid
centrifuge
Cerium
chemical synthesis
chemiosmotic potential
Chemiosmotic hypothesis
chemotherapy
Chime
chlorin
cinchona
citrulline
circular dichroism
cobalt
Coenzyme Q - cytochrome c reductase
Coenzyme Q
complex
cooperative
cooperative binding
Copper
corrin
crucible
crystallin
cuvette
cyanide
cytochrome c
cytochrome c oxidase
cytochrome c peroxidase
Dating the Bible
denatured
dihydrofolate reductase
documentary hypothesis
EDTA
electron transfer chain
electromagnet
essential amino acid
enzyme
flavin
folic acid
gecko
globular protein
glutathione peroxidase
graduated cylinder
heme
hemoprotein
hemoglobin
high energy phosphate
homocysteine
Hydrogen
hydrolysis
iodoform
Iron
iron-sulfur cluster
isoprene
laboratory glassware
Lanthanum
leghemoglobin
ligand
macromolecule
Magnetic Circular Dichroism
malaria
manganese
methionine
native state
molten globule
Molybdenum
monazite
myoglobin
NADH dehydrogenase
niacin
Nickel
Nitrogen
nitric acid
net protein utilization
nuclear magnetic resonance
ornithine
ornithine decarboxylase
oxime
Oxygen
Paul Ehrlich
peroxidase
phosphagen
phosphate
pipette
polyamine
porphyrin
potassium ferricyanide
prion
protein
Protein data bank
protein folding
proton pump
putrescine
pyrite
pyrrole
pyrophosphate
radical (chemistry)
random coil
Selenium
sickle cell anemia
stopper
submitochondrial particle
Sulfonamide
Sulfur
superoxide
superoxide dismutase
test tube
thiamin
Thorium
ultracentrifuge
urea cycle
water
xanthine
xanthine oxidase
zinc

I've gone through most of the enzymes listed in enzyme and added Protein Data Bank references for them, added an essential amino acid reference to all the essential amino acids, and added a ton of oxidation numbers to unconverted transition metal elements (and some text, occasionally).


Materials I May Have Used in Reference

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I write a lot of stuff, and it doesn't come out of the blue. So, these notes or texts may have been consulted while writing articles above.

  • Class notes by Prof K. Matthews or Prof J. Olson, or that G. Palmer guy. (More recently, I have contacted John to get access to more current class notes in use at Rice. Material based on these will appear shortly)
  • The occasional pithy comment of Prof John Walker, or a Prof G. Ackers, or Prof T. Yonetani, or Prof Len Spicer.
  • Cantor and Schimmel, Biophysical Chemistry, 1980, W. H. Freeman and Co.
  • Lehninger, Biochemistry, 1975, Worth Publishers
  • The Merck Index, 8th Edition.
  • McGilvery, R. W. and Goldstein, G., Biochemistry - A Functional Approach, 1979, W. B. Saunders and Co.
  • Pauling, L., College Chemistry, 3rd Ed., 1964, W. H. Freeman and Co.
  • Tzagaloff, Mitochondria, 1982, Plenum Publishing Co.
  • Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia, 4th Ed., 1969, Van Nostrand Company, Inc.
  • Wyman, J., and Gill, S., Binding and Linkage, 1990, University Science Books
  • The Meaning of the Short Bald Fellow.

Modern Interests

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I have a football blog here: http://codeandfootball.wordpress.com