<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/stories/working-with-a-protein-inhibitor-gone-awry.html" dsn="news"><featured/><pubDate>07/01/2019</pubDate><title>Working With a Protein Inhibitor Gone Awry</title><description>Nanoscopic science can be tricky. When things don't go as planned science researchers must adapt, which is what one Franklin &amp; Marshall College student, at work in the lab on a protease inhibitor...Franklin &amp; Marshall College offers students a hands-on education that emphasizes close relationships with faculty. Students flourish in a supportive community that treats them as an individual, and their successes continue long after F&amp;M. The College is a national leader in launching students and alumni to opportunities where they make a difference in the community and the world.</description><author>Peter Durantine</author><image><img src="/uploads/files/637226001338113511-06-27-professor-piro-and-christian-bogardus-06-dg.0.38.1200.723.full.jpg" alt="Working with Associate Professor of Chemistry Phillips-Piro, Bogardus mass spectrometry work is done on a state-of-the-art Waters QT of Mass Spectrometer, partially funded by Dr. George Martin 79. Professor of Chemistry Ken Hess maintains the instrument."/></image><image-caption/><tags><tag>Biochemistry and Molecular Biology</tag><tag>Bonchek College House</tag><tag>Chemistry</tag><tag>Research</tag></tags></item>