Haase, A.; Hartung, K.: Pre-Steady-State Kinetics of Ba-Ca Exchange Reveals a Second Electrogenic Step Involved in Ca2+ Translocation by the Na-Ca Exchanger. Biophysical Journal 96 (11), pp. 4571 - 4580 (2009)
Haase, A.; Wood, P. G.; Pintschovius, V.; Bamberg, E.; Hartung, K.: Time resolved kinetics of the guinea pig Na-Ca exchanger (NCX1) expressed in Xenopus oocytes: voltage and Ca2+ dependence of the pre-steady-state current investigated by photolytic Ca2+ concentration jumps. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 454 (6), pp. 1031 - 1042 (2007)
Haase, A.; Hartung, K.: Activation and inactivation kinetics of a Ca2+-activated Cl- current: photolytic Ca2+ concentration and voltage jump experiments. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 452, pp. 81 - 90 (2006)
Haase, A.; Kappl, M.; Nagel, G.; Wood, P. G.; Hartung, K.: The Ca/Ca Exchange Mode of the Na/Ca Exchanger Investigated by Photolytic Ca2+ Concentration Jumps. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 976 (1), pp. 113 - 116 (2002)
Haase, A.: Untersuchungen zur Kinetik des Ca2+-aktivierten Chloridkanals und des Na+-Ca2+-Austauschers. Dissertation, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main (2003)
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Biophysics and the University of Cologne developed a new optical tool to study ferroptosis, a form of iron-driven cell death. Better understanding of how it spreads could open doors to new therapies.
On February 5, 2024, we participated in the “Frankfurt Stands Up for Democracy” demonstration, standing alongside nearly 20,000 participants representing over 100 institutions, organizations, and companies across the Frankfurt region.
The Max Planck Institute of Biophysics is part of the new science network Frankfurt Alliance together with 15 other research institutions in the Rhine-Main metropolitan area
The fellow program promotes cooperation between Max Planck Institutes and outstanding professors at universities. From March 2024, Müller-McNicoll will lead a small research group at the MPI in Frankfurt for five years to investigate RNA, the carrier of genetic information in the cell, and its regulation.