A supplement providing a snapshot of the latest developments in chemical biology
Essential Elements
Sex, love and our chemical nature
A new book published by the RSC, Lust and Love: Is it more than chemistry? examines the age old questions of why people fall in love and what makes people attractive.

Providing a fascinating insight into these questions, through the eyes of science, it explores the way we feel and behave from first meetings to long term partnerships. Written by a husband and wife team, the book was a popular best seller in Germany. Rolf Froböse explains why they decided to write it, '"Love is as harmless as a spoon of hydrochloric acid on an empty stomach," the French writer Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867) once said. We don't agree with him but - as chemists and scientific journalists - we wanted to find out why people fall in love and how the famous "chemistry between people" works.'
Drawing on all areas of science including chemistry, biochemistry, neurology, psychiatry, psychology, physics and medicine, the book takes a light-hearted approach to the subject using fictional characters for illustration. 'The readers will find some answers to a lot of burning questions and we also present the most interesting results from international researchers, who could enlighten the science behind love, desire and passion,' adds Froböse. From physical attraction to emotional connections this fascinating book is a must read for young and old.
Find out more at:
Lust and Love
Copyright: 2006Gabriele Froböse
Why do people fall in love and what is love anyway? What makes people attractive? How do these emotions tie in with our physiology? This book hopes to answer such questions.
Molecular BioSystems in the spotlight
News that the National Library of Medicine has selected Molecular BioSystems, the RSC's chemical biology journal, for indexing and inclusion in their MEDLINE database brought the journal's first year of publication to a highly successful conclusion.
Visibility of the journal in the community is certain to increase as a result, as the MEDLINE database is searched by researchers and health professionals worldwide through search engines such as PubMed.
This latest news follows the announcement that 3D visualisation of complex protein structures has become a simple click-through process for the journal's readers. Anyone can view and appreciate key biomolecular structures in three dimensions, whatever their level of expertise.
The PDB identification code of the molecule is used to generate an image using FirstGlance in Jmol. The resulting image is viewed in a free online applet - enabling you to rotate the molecule, customise the view and zoom in to specific areas of interest. One of the views displays colour-coded amino acid sidechains and nucleotide bases. Guidance and explanations are always visible on screen, whatever the view you have selected or operation you are performing.
For more on this, and the other online features available to authors and readers, visit:
Chemical biology, systems biology, -omics and more
And finally...
A new edition of the popular textbook Nucleic Acids in Chemistry and Biology has just been released. Thoroughly revised and updated it is now in its 3rd edition.
Written by leading experts in the field the book includes DNA and RNA structure, genes and genomes, RNA structure and function, covalent interactions, reversible interactions and physical and structural techniques applied to nucleic acids.

Complete with illustrations and worked examples, this comprehensive book is ideal for graduates and people who require an introduction to the field of nucleic acids.
Find out more at:
Nucleic Acids in Chemistry and Biology
Copyright: 2006G Michael Blackburn
This book is ideal for graduate and undergraduates students of chemistry and biochemistry, as well as new researchers to the field.
