NSF was discovered by James Rothman and colleagues in 1987 while at Stanford University; they identified NSF after observing that a cytoplasmic factor, required for membrane fusions, was inactivated by treatment with N-ethylmaleimide.
protein | Protein subunit | Protein-protein interaction | jazz fusion | Hfq protein | protein domain | Protein-protein_interaction | Jazz fusion | Protein Data Bank | RNA-binding protein | nuclear fusion | Fusion | Ford Fusion | ATP-sensitive potassium channel | Promyelocytic leukemia protein | Nintendo Fusion Tour | G protein | fusion | cold fusion | Celtic fusion | Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein | Protein G | protein dimer | Protein A | C-reactive protein | Bone morphogenetic protein 2 | AMP-activated protein kinase | Transmembrane protein | Tau protein | Sterol regulatory element-binding protein |