C-CAS is now accepting applications for the 2026 Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) Program.
More details here: ccas.nd.edu/outreach/sur...
#chemistry #computerscience #chemsky #summerresearch #REU #undergraduateresearch
Out today in Science Magazine — First author Veronika Kivenson and PIs Jill Banfield (The Banfield Lab) and Alanna Schepartz team up to reveal a new genetic code in #archaea, with implications for #methane and #climate, and #bioengineering! Learn more: https://ow.ly/Kuem50Xurh0
Chintan's work demonstrating the efficient incorporation of non-α-amino acid backbones into proteins expressed in both E. coli and mammalian cells just came out! A great collaborative effort from @cgemcci.bsky.social! pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Expanding the genetic code of living cells with noncanonical monomers (ncMs) relies on engineered aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRS) and their cognate tRNAs. Conventional aaRS engineering strategies rely on translation-dependent selection systems, limiting their utility for ncMs that are poorly accommodated by the native translational machinery. To address this limitation, we recently developed START, a translation-independent platform that selects Methanomethylophilus alvus pyrrolysyl-synthetase (MaPylRS) mutants based on their ability to acylate cognate tRNAMaPyl. START uses barcoded tRNAs to encode the identity of distinct aaRS mutants in a library. Acylation by active aaRS mutants protects the corresponding tRNAs from periodate oxidation, and their identity is retrieved subsequently through sequencing. START was previously applied to genetically encode noncanonical α-amino acids. Here, we successfully applied START to engineer MaPylRS mutants capable of acylating tRNAMaPyl with diverse non-α-amino acid substrates with good efficiency and fidelity, including (R) and (S) enantiomers of a β2-hydroxy acid, a β2-amino acids, and a malonate. Several mutants exhibit notable polyspecificity across noncanonical backbones while maintaining selectivity against their α-amino acid counterparts. Using these novel enzymes, we demonstrate the ribosomal incorporation of both (R)- and (S)-β2-hydroxy acids into a luciferase reporter protein expressed in Escherichia coli with good efficiency and fidelity. These results imply that highly active engineered aaRS/tRNA pairs can overcome the recently established limitations of EF-Tu with respect to non-α-amino acid substrates. The engineered MaPylRS mutants also enabled the successful incorporation of both (R)- and (S)-β2-hydroxy acids into a protein expressed in mammalian cells, demonstrating for the first time that eukaryotic translation can accommodate non-α-backbones.
NSF Center for Computer Assisted Synthesis (C-CAS)
Abhishek Chatterjee
New paper alert 🚨 from @cgemcci.bsky.social showing high-resolution cryo-EM structures and mass spectrometry data that help us understand how beta-hydroxy acids are accommodated and incorporated by the ribosome!
✨ Meet this year's cohort of C-GEM Summer Undergraduate Research Program Scholars!
gem-net.net/c-gem-welcom...
#NSFfunded
Today, I'm grateful that Alanna Schepartz is visiting Tufts. Alanna's leadership of @cgemcci.bsky.social has led to impressive advances in genetic code expansion, including recently published work pushing encoding beyond alpha-amino acids.
#ChemSky #ChemChat
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Welcome to the 2026 cohort of Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP) scholars! This year, we are hosting four scholars across UC Berkeley, Cornell...
gem-net.net
A post-translational backbone extension acyl rearrangement (BEAR) reaction has now been developed that converts a ribosomal protein product into a new product containing a β-peptide, γ-peptide or δ-pe...
C-GEM, the NSF Center for Genetically Encoded Materials
Jim Van Deventer
Check out our new paper using mass spectrometry and cryo-EM to show ribosomal incorporation and accommodation of β-hydroxy acid stereoisomers, bringing us closer to ribosomal synthesis of non-natural polymers. @c-majumdar.bsky.social @jhdcate.bsky.social
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
🧬 Come visit C-GEM's table to learn about polymer science at the Lawrence Hall of Science's $5 Admission Day on Sunday, May 17, 2026!
Find out more about the event here: lawrencehallofscience.org/events/five-...