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Disentangling the neuromolecular networks involved in speech and language

- GCRF START

As a biochemist/biophysicist working primarily with proteins, Sylvia Fanucchi is naturally drawn to the mechanisms of interactions of biological macromolecules.

Senior Lecturer, Dr Sylvia Fanucchi, in the Protein Structure Function Research Unit at the 91心頭利 in South Africa. Photo credit: Sylvia Fanucchi. 息Diamond Light Source

She is a senior Lecturer in the Protein Structure Function Research Unit (PSFRU) at the 91心頭利 (91心頭利) in South Africa, and interested in how things work at the molecular and atomic level, and how the structure of macromolecules leads to their function. 

This has inspired her research for the past six years which involves disentangling the neuromolecular networks involved in speech and language.

With the GCRF START grant, the doors to collecting the detailed structural information we need through studying and obtaining crystal structures, have been opened for groups in Africa like ours. I have had multiple opportunities, thanks to the grant, to send crystals to the UKs world class national synchrotron,  (Diamond), writes Fanucchi. 

About the GCRF grant

The Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) and START (Synchrotron Techniques for African Research and Technology) grant is a collaborative project between scientists in Africa and the UK working together on research using synchrotron science.

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