Simulating Protein-Carbohydrate Interactions to Bridge the Gap Between Human Chemical Intuition and Molecular Biophysics

Tuesday, February 20, 2018 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm

Location

NCRC, Building 10, Room ACR2

Details

In complex reacting systems, it can be exceedingly difficult, or even impossible, to tease out elementary reaction mechanisms from wet-lab data alone, due to data convolution resulting from the multiple reacting steps and competing reactions that simultaneously occur. The systems that the Mayes group studies (multiple types of protein-carbohydrate interactions) certainly fall into this category, with understanding further hindered by the conformational, stereochemical, and regiochemical degrees of freedom key to chemical reactions in these systems. Yet, understanding these elementary mechanisms would not only help answer fundamental questions in biology, but also improve our ability to harness these systems for applications from renewable energy to pharmaceutical interventions. I will discuss several systems that we are studying, and focus on our investigations of how enzymes break down plant biomass. I will share how our computational research rationalizes non-intuitive wet-lab observations by revealing mechanisms that do not conform to human intuition. In doing so, we gather lessons from how nature has evolved efficient enzymes that we can then apply to rational enzyme design.

Bio: Heather Mayes is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering. Her research group uses multi-scale modeling to discover protein-sugar interactions and to harness them for renewable energy and improved health.

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