Our group is an interdisciplinary group, focusing
on problems of molecular and biomolecular recognition. Molecular
recognition impacts a wide range of fields, including asymmetric
catalysis, materials chemistry, and protein folding. Consider, for
example, designing a drug to bind to the active site of an enzyme.
What features other than shape might contribute to binding? What
types of interactions will provide high affinity as well as high
selectivity? These are general questions in the field of molecular
recognition that we are investigating for applications to biosensing,
drug delivery, and de novo protein design.
The research interests in our group span a wide range, from mechanistic
organic chemistry and molecular recognition to structural biology,
and hence involve the use of a variety of techniques. Methods used
in our group include organic and solid phase synthesis, combinatorial
chemistry, computational chemistry, molecular biology, kinetic and
thermodynamic measurements using 1D and 2D NMR, circular dichroism,
UV/Vis and fluorescence spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation,
and calorimetry. The extent that any one student uses these techniques
depends largely on the particular student’s research interests.
Please see our group webpage for more
detailed information.
|