
A new paper on the selection and design of a peptide ligand for the separation of human erythropoietin has been published in the Journal of Chromatography A. The publication focuses on work primarily performed by William Kish during his time in the lab as a doctoral student.
The work tells about the search for cyclic ligands that bind erythropoietin with higher specificity, and includes information about how the authors had to combat the peptide library’s propensity to produce sequences that were primarily hydrophobic in nature. The use of in-silico docking informed the study, a tool the lab is currently using and developing to make our processes and searches better tuned and better understood.
The paper is currently available online – check it out!
Citation and link: William S Kish, Hiroyuki Sachi, Amith D Naik, Matthew K Roach, Benjamin G Bobay, Robert K Blackburn, Stefano Menegatti, Ruben G Carbonell. Design, selection, and development of cyclic peptide ligands for human erythropoietin. J. Chrom. A. 2017.
Keywords: Erythropoietin; Cyclic peptide ligands; Ligand screening; Affinity chromatography; Affinity maturation; In-silico docking
Journal of Chromatography A image came from the J. Chrom. A description on Elsevier.
Hannah Reese went to the 253rd American Chemical Society meeting in San Fransisco. She presented some of her work in the lab on the separation of IgG isoforms to the BIOT division of the meeting. She would like to thank our collaborator, Allen Hirsh from Cryobiophysica, for providing the piSEP buffer and gradient maker system. Way to go, Hannah!
Congratulations to Camden Cutright and Kaitlyn Bacon on their receipt of the National Science Foundation’s prestigious graduate fellowship award!
Dr. Menegatti has won the prestigious NSF CAREER award for young faculty based off of his 2016 proposal. This award is meant to recognize and stimulate research and teaching faculty with promising career tracks and creative, productive ideas. It also encourages young faculty to be good role models and take up leadership roles within their departments and research fields.