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Biocatalyst development for peptide synthesis

Description 
Peptides are vital for modern medicine, with complex exemplars found to exhibit important properties including acting as antibiotics, as hormones to control blood sugar, and as molecules to mitigate damage from conditions such as heart attack and stroke. While total chemical synthesis is a powerful technique for making such peptides, it also comes with significant economic and environmental costs, and scale up remains challenging. This project seeks to develop enzymes to enable the synthesis and modification of peptides and to use these enzymes as biocatalysts to assist in the more environmentally friendly production of these molecules. Our interests are particularly focussed on complex peptide modifications, and enabling the use of such engineered biocatalysts to develop peptide libraries for lead development and structure/activity relationship screening. This project is therefore grounded in biochemistry and enzymology, and involves protein chemistry, enzyme design and engineering (both using computational methods and through directed evolution) and screen development.
Essential criteria: 
Minimum entry requirements can be found here: https://www.monash.edu/admissions/entry-requirements/minimum
Keywords 
peptides, biocatalysis, enzymes, sustainable synthesis, biochemistry
School 
Biomedicine Discovery Institute (School of Biomedical Sciences) » Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Available options 
PhD/Doctorate
Masters by research
Honours
Time commitment 
Full-time
Top-up scholarship funding available 
No
Physical location 
15 Innovation Walk
Co-supervisors 
Dr 
Julien Tailhades
Dr 
Lauren Murray

Want to apply for this project? Submit an Expression of Interest by clicking on Contact the researcher.