Summary: | "Since the first edition of this Textbook, Chemical Biology has now established itself as a major branch of scientific activity devoted to understanding the way Biology works at the molecular level. Chemical Biology itself remains unashamedly multidisciplinary, and Chemical Biology research is essentially problem driven and not discipline driven. Organic, Physical, Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry all contribute towards Chemical Biology alongside newer emerging molecular disciplines. Some might say that Chemical Biology is just another way to rebadge Biochemistry. However, such a comment misses the point. Biochemistry may have started as a discipline devoted to the study of individual biological macromolecules, but this discipline has been steadily evolving into increasingly descriptive, empirical studies of larger and larger macromolecular assemblies, structures and interacting molecular networks. The molecular increasingly gives ground to the cellular. In contrast, Chemical Biology is about Chemistry trained graduates and researchers taking a fundamental interest in the way Biology works. Consequently, the focus is on the molecular and the quantitative where molecular properties are investigated, studied and then gradually linked to macromolecular and cellular behaviour where possible. This is a fundamentally bottom-up approach to understanding Biology in keeping with the chemist's natural enthusiasm and appreciation for molecular structure and behaviour first and foremost"--
|