Fai Alotaibi, Meisel Lab Graduate Student, GW Department of Chemistry

Conformational Control of Arylamide Foldamers for Protein Surface Recognition
Fri, 3 May, 2024 10:00am - 11:00am

Fai Alotaibi
Fai Alotaibi, Graduate Student, Meisel Lab, GW Department of Chemistry

 

 

 

 

 

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are essential for many biological processes. Aberrant PPIs are also the molecular basis of many diseases, making them an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. Peptidomimetics, which are synthetic compounds that mimic the structures and functions of peptides, can be designed to modulate PPIs. Foldamers are synthetic oligomers with well-defined secondary and tertiary structures. Foldamers can be designed as peptidomimetics, making them promising scaffolds for targeting PPIs.

In this project, a series of arylamide foldamers were developed aiming to improve the conformation control using hydrogen bonding, stereosequence, and a bridging group. Nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism spectroscopy were used to compare the conformations of this foldamer series in solution. We determined that using the bridging group and stereosequence in addition to hydrogen bonding significantly improved their folding compared to using hydrogen bonding alone. Furthermore, we developed a robust structure-based computational workflow to identify potential peptidomimetic compounds from a virtual foldamer library using a model of the PPI complex and commercially available software.

 

BIO

Fai received her B.S. in chemistry from Kuwait University in 2020. She joined the George Washington University in 2022 to obtain her M.S. degree. She then joined the Meisel Lab to complete a Master’s thesis on designing conformationally controlled oligomers for molecular recognition and developing computational tools for peptidomimetic design.

 

 

Where
Science & Engineering Hall 800 22nd Street, NW, Room: B1220 Washington DC 20052
Room: Room: B1220; Meeting Number: 202-994-6121

Admission
Open to everyone.

Contacts
Chemistry Department
[email protected]
202-994-6121

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