【11/28開催】第21回発動分子科学セミナー/第7回WRHIサテライトラボセミナーのお知らせ

【11/28開催】第21回発動分子科学セミナー/第7回WRHIサテライトラボセミナーのお知らせ

WRHIからのお知らせ おすすめ イベント

Bradley Pentelute特任准教授(MIT准教授)をお迎えして、すずかけ台キャンパスにてセミナーを開催いたします。宜しくご参集のほど、お願い申し上げます。

日   時

2019年11月28日(木)16:00~17:30

場   所

すずかけ台キャンパス B2棟B223講義室

https://www.titech.ac.jp/maps/suzukakedai/

講演題目

“Rapid discovery, manufacturing, and delivery of bioactive proteins and antisense oligonucleotides

Abstract : Antisense oligonucleotides, proteins and other biopolymers serve as a foundation of modern therapeutics for the treatment of diseases ranging from cancer to diabetes. The discovery, manufacturing, and delivery of these biomolecules into cells is often a challenge and limits rapid translation to the clinic. Here I describe our latest findings on the development of a platform for discovery of peptide drug leads from 100 million-member synthetic libraries.
Our best lead compounds efficiently disrupt cancer-specific protein-protein interactions in cells. We also aim to overcome the cytosolic delivery barrier with cell-penetrating peptides, chemical vectors that facilitate cellular permeation and nuclear targeting of antisense cargoes. The properties of these peptide-based materials were positively altered with macrocyclization chemistry, specifically by cysteine arylation. These modifications impart the ability to cross biological barriers, including the blood-brain barrier and plasma membrane, allowing the therapeutic biopolymers to strike their target and correct cellular function. We applied machine learning algorithms to our vast data set on cellular penetration and predicted novel peptide materials to transport into cells large oligonucleotides (6,500 Da) that may treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Manufacturing our new cell-penetrating drug leads and oligonucleotides is hindered by the rate at which we synthesize them, which is far slower than Nature’s production pace of seconds. Realizing this, we have built table top machines that that use man-made chemistry to synthesize peptides in minutes and proteins in hours.