Non-canonical amino acids in proteins: structural investigations and biocatalysis

Non-canonical amino acids in proteins: structural investigations and biocatalysis

Published on 03/02/2015

February 10th, 2015
DECHEMA-Haus
Frankfurt/Main, Germany

 

The one-day symposium, organised by the DECHEMA working group on novel bio-production systems, will focus on recent advancements in the production and the application of these artificial proteins.

Non-canonical amino acids in proteins: structural investigations and biocatalysis

February 10th, 2015
DECHEMA-Haus
Frankfurt/Main, Germany

Dechema

All organisms - from bacteria to mammals – seem to employ no more than 22 amino acids to build their proteins. Thus, proteins containing non-natural synthetic amino acids are of great interest for basic research and biotechnology. They would expand the options of protein engineering and biocatalysis. However, the directed incorporation of non-natural amino acids into proteins remains a formidable challenge. Recent years saw the development of different methods to this end: Feeding non-natural amino acids to auxotrophic cells, the engineering of orthogonal systems into cellular protein biosynthesis, and cell-free biosynthesis have proven useful for the production of such proteins. The one-day symposium, organised by the DECHEMA working group on novel bio-production systems, will focus on recent advancements in the production and the application of these artificial proteins.

Iris Biotech GmbH will be present at the one-day symposium in Frankfurt/Main.