Speaker: Prof. Alexander Buell
Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Section for Protein Chemistry and Enzyme Technology, DTU Protein Biophysics Core, Protein Biophysics, Lyngby, Denmark
Presentation
Host: Dr. Xavier Salvatella, Group Leader - IRB Barcelona
Node: Chemical & Structural Biology / Computational Biology
Date: Thursday 30 Jan 2025, 9.30h
Place: Serratosa Room
Biomolecular condensates (BMCs), spatial regions that are not membrane-bound but nevertheless strongly enriched in certain biomolecular components, are of great current interest, due to their relevance in biological function and disease. Experimental methods that allow to study the dependence of BMC formation on solution conditions and amino acid sequence are therefore sought after, in particular if those methods allow to screen these parameters at high throughput (HTP). Such HTP methods are valuable for screening campaigns, but also to obtain improved understanding of the driving forces responsible for BMC formation.
In this seminar, I will present two microfluidics-based methods, Capflex (Stender et al., Nat. Comm. 2021) and TDIPS (Norrild et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2024), that are based on the commercially available FIDA1 microcapillary based instrument and that allow the convenient study of the influence of solution conditions on BMC formation. Furthermore, I will present a novel method based on mRNA-display that we call Condensate Partitioning by mRNA-Display (CPmD, Norrild et al., bioRxiv pre-print 2024, https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.12.21.629870). This method allows to study the partitioning of tens of thousands of peptides into BMCs in a single experiment and provides fundamental insights into the basic thermodynamics of BMC formation.”
IMPORTANT: For attendees outside the PCB community you must register at least 24h before the seminar