Christopher J. Schofield

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Christopher_J._Schofield an entity of type: Thing

Christopher Joseph Schofield (also known as Chris Schofield) is the Head of Organic Chemistry at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of the Royal Society. Chris Schofield is a professor of organic chemistry at the University of Oxford, Department of Chemistry and a Fellow of Hertford College. Prof Schofield studied functional, structural and mechanistic understanding of enzymes that employ oxygen and 2-oxoglutarate as a co-substrate. His work has opened up new possibilities in antibiotic research, oxygen sensing, and gene regulation. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Christopher J. Schofield
rdf:langString Christopher J. Schofield
rdf:langString Christopher J. Schofield
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:date 1960-06-17
xsd:integer 51277415
xsd:integer 1109952658
rdf:langString Chemistry Research Laboratory, University of Oxford
rdf:langString University of Manchester University of Oxford
rdf:langString Fellow of the Royal Society
xsd:date 1960-06-17
rdf:langString Christopher Joseph Schofield
rdf:langString Hypoxic Response, Epigenetic, Oxygenases, Antibiotic Resistance
rdf:langString British
rdf:langString Chris Schofield, CJS
rdf:langString Christopher Joseph Schofield (also known as Chris Schofield) is the Head of Organic Chemistry at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of the Royal Society. Chris Schofield is a professor of organic chemistry at the University of Oxford, Department of Chemistry and a Fellow of Hertford College. Prof Schofield studied functional, structural and mechanistic understanding of enzymes that employ oxygen and 2-oxoglutarate as a co-substrate. His work has opened up new possibilities in antibiotic research, oxygen sensing, and gene regulation. After work on plant and microbial oxygenases, he studied uncharacterised human oxygenases. His research has identified unanticipated roles for oxygenases in regulating gene expression, importantly in the cellular hypoxic response, and has revealed new post-translational modifications to chromatin and RNA splicing proteins. The work has identified new opportunities for medicinal intervention.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 42100
rdf:langString Chris Schofield, CJS
rdf:langString Christopher Joseph Schofield

data from the linked data cloud