Research Areas - (1) Rotary Molecular Motor Light Microscopy (Bacterial Flagellar Motor)

Full path: Biology > Biophysics > Quantum Biology / Biosensing > Optical Trapping Biophysics > Rotary Molecular Motor Light Microscopy (Bacterial Flagellar Motor)

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (Biological Physics) | Biophysics of Molecular Motors Group (Berry) @ Oxford
Summary:

Berry studies rotary molecular motors, especially the bacterial flagellar motor, using novel forms of light microscopy (laser dark-field microscopy, back-focal-plane laser interferometry, optical and magnetic tweezers) to track sub-micron handles with nanometre and sub-millisecond resolution, revealing how these nanoscale engines are built, controlled and generate torque.