Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering

Protein sequences inhabit a discrete set in macromolecular space with incredible capacity to treat human disease. Despite our ability to program and manipulate protein sequences, the vast majority of protein development efforts are still done heuristically without a unified set of guiding principles...

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Main Author: Michael A. Nash
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Swiss Chemical Society 2020-09-01
Series:CHIMIA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000009/art00010
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spelling doaj-df97287352084a9c881dcc2d7dec8bfe2020-11-25T03:15:35ZdeuSwiss Chemical SocietyCHIMIA0009-42932673-24242020-09-0174970470910.2533/chimia.2020.704Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular BioengineeringMichael A. Nash0Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland; Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zurich, CH-4058 Basel, SwitzerlandProtein sequences inhabit a discrete set in macromolecular space with incredible capacity to treat human disease. Despite our ability to program and manipulate protein sequences, the vast majority of protein development efforts are still done heuristically without a unified set of guiding principles. This article highlights work in understanding biophysical stability and function of proteins, developing new biophysical measurement tools and building high-throughput screening platforms to explore functional protein sequences. We highlight two primary areas. First, molecular biomechanics is a subfield concerned with the response of proteins to mechanical forces, and how we can leverage mechanical force to control protein function. The second subfield investigates the use of polymers and hydrogels in protein engineering and directed evolution in pursuit of new molecular systems with therapeutic applications. These two subdisciplines complement each other by shedding light onto sequence and structural features that can be used to impart stability into therapeutic proteins.https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000009/art00010atomic force microscopyhydrogelsmolecular biomechanicsprotein engineering
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael A. Nash
spellingShingle Michael A. Nash
Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
CHIMIA
atomic force microscopy
hydrogels
molecular biomechanics
protein engineering
author_facet Michael A. Nash
author_sort Michael A. Nash
title Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
title_short Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
title_full Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
title_fullStr Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
title_full_unstemmed Single-molecule and Single-cell Approaches in Molecular Bioengineering
title_sort single-molecule and single-cell approaches in molecular bioengineering
publisher Swiss Chemical Society
series CHIMIA
issn 0009-4293
2673-2424
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Protein sequences inhabit a discrete set in macromolecular space with incredible capacity to treat human disease. Despite our ability to program and manipulate protein sequences, the vast majority of protein development efforts are still done heuristically without a unified set of guiding principles. This article highlights work in understanding biophysical stability and function of proteins, developing new biophysical measurement tools and building high-throughput screening platforms to explore functional protein sequences. We highlight two primary areas. First, molecular biomechanics is a subfield concerned with the response of proteins to mechanical forces, and how we can leverage mechanical force to control protein function. The second subfield investigates the use of polymers and hydrogels in protein engineering and directed evolution in pursuit of new molecular systems with therapeutic applications. These two subdisciplines complement each other by shedding light onto sequence and structural features that can be used to impart stability into therapeutic proteins.
topic atomic force microscopy
hydrogels
molecular biomechanics
protein engineering
url https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000009/art00010
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelanash singlemoleculeandsinglecellapproachesinmolecularbioengineering
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