Biochemistry Seminar: Rachel Martin, "Protein aging and cataract: Biophysical methods to see it clearly"

Dates
Wed, Oct 11, 2023 - 12:00 PM — Wed, Oct 11, 2023 - 01:00 PM
Admission Fee
Free. Coffee & tea will be available in the ASRC Cafe at 11:30 AM.
Event Address
This speaker will be in-person at the ASRC Main Auditorium, 85 Saint Nicholas Terrace.
Phone Number
212-650-8803
Event Location
This seminar will also be available by Zoom.
Event Details

Rachel Martin, Professor of Chemistry at the University of California Irvine, will present a talk titled, "Protein aging and cataract: Biophysical methods to see it clearly."

ABSTRACT

The optical power of the vertebrate eye lens is generated by the crystallins, exceptionally soluble proteins that are packed in at very high concentration (up to about 50% protein in humans, and even higher in fish). The extraordinary solubility of these proteins is even more remarkable given that the lens has almost no protein turnover: crystallin proteins have to last for a lifetime. When crystallins do aggregate, the result is cataract, a major cause of blindness worldwide. Understanding both the transparent hydrogel of the healthy lens and the aggregates of the disease state is a long-term research direction for my group. The NMR instrumentation we have developed to study semi-solid protein systems of this type that are not amenable to either standard solid-state or solution techniques is integral to this work. I will present our recent structural and biophysical work on mutations involved in hereditary cataract, the impact of oxidative damage, and the complex relationship among different types of post-translational modifications. I will also discuss the evolutionary relationships between human crystallins and those of aquatic organisms, which must satisfy much more stringent demands in terms of both solubility and refractivity.

 

Zoom link: https://gc-cuny.zoom.us/j/96677631144. Meeting ID:  966 776 31144. Passcode: asrc-ccny

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