Chandrima Majumdar
@c-majumdar.bsky.social
📤 63
📥 342
📝 6
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!
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 month ago
0
2
1
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Abhishek Chatterjee
about 1 month ago
A back-to-back paper from Alanna Schepartz and
@jhdcate.bsky.social
groups shows how the E. coli ribosome supports the incorporation of the non-α-amino acid monomers!
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
loading . . .
Co-Translational Incorporation of (R)- and (S)-β2-Hydroxy Acids In Vitro: A Structural and Biochemical Study on the E. coli Ribosome
Engineering the translation apparatus to accept backbone-modified amino acid analogues would enable the programmed synthesis of sequence-defined biopolymers with tunable properties. β-Hydroxy acids ar...
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.5c18603
0
5
3
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Abhishek Chatterjee
about 1 month ago
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/...
loading . . .
Co-Translational Incorporation of (R)- and (S)-β2-Hydroxyacids In Vivo: Directed Evolution of Efficient Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases
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.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.5c18595
1
10
3
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Jamie Cate
3 months ago
"Use it or lose it." This is great advice for exercise, but when cells need to slow down or go dormant, they need to store ribosomes to recover growth in the future. They use hibernation factors to do this. Here is our latest story on how archaea hibernate ribosomes (1/7):
doi.org/10.64898/202...
loading . . .
https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.19.700200
1
38
15
In the latest installment of
@asbmb.bsky.social
's career exploration podcast, "In conversation with..." Lou Stancato, VP of Enabling Technologies at the Indiana Biosciences Research Institute shares insights from his career:
www.asbmb.org/career-resou...
loading . . .
In conversation with...
Engaging discussions with biological and life sciences professionals about their career journeys and the various opportunities available to graduate students and postdocs.
https://www.asbmb.org/career-resources/in-conversation-with?_zs=6xvfo&_zl=U2oM3
10 months ago
0
1
1
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Innovative Genomics Institute
11 months ago
Jennifer Doudna
@jenniferdoudna.bsky.social
@doudna-lab.bsky.social
speaks with Cleo Abrams on the history and future of
#CRISPR
🧬. Watch here:
youtu.be/0OXaanDHENI?..
.
loading . . .
You Can Fix Your DNA... Starting Now (feat. Nobel Prize Winner)
YouTube video by Cleo Abram
https://youtu.be/0OXaanDHENI?..
0
11
6
Check out the latest episodes of the
#ASBMB
podcast Cindy Khuu shares her story of pursuing a career in regulatory affairs Nisha Cavanaugh, talks about her role in research administration Shyretha Brown, shares her experience as the director of a non-profit!
www.asbmb.org/career-resou...
loading . . .
In conversation with...
Engaging discussions with biological and life sciences professionals about their career journeys and the various opportunities available to graduate students and postdocs.
https://www.asbmb.org/career-resources/in-conversation-with
11 months ago
0
1
2
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Conner Langeberg
11 months ago
Final grad paper is officially out! Grateful for the incredible team and all the support along the way!
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
loading . . .
Tick-borne flavivirus exoribonuclease-resistant RNAs contain a double loop structure - Nature Communications
Many flaviviruses generate specialized non-coding RNAs that resist degradation by host exonucleases, promoting viral infection. Here, the authors characterize an RNA element in Powassan virus, highlig...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-59657-7
0
5
3
Check out our latest preprint describing two structures of ribosomes complexed with the two enantiomers of a β2-hydroxy acid. Our structures show that despite stereochemical differences, both are ultimately well positioned for bond formation within the ribosome!
chemrxiv.org/engage/chemr...
loading . . .
Escherichia coli ribosomes support translation of (R) and (S) β2-hydroxyacids in vitro: a structural and biochemical study
The ribosomal incorporation of backbone-modified amino acid analogs into peptides and proteins enables the programmed synthesis of sequence-defined biopolymers with tunable properties. However, the su...
https://chemrxiv.org/engage/chemrxiv/article-details/6819e531e561f77ed446daa4
11 months ago
0
6
4
reposted by
Chandrima Majumdar
Erin Doherty
about 1 year ago
Preprint alert! ✨ In this project that I co-led with
@benadler.bsky.social
, we show that a miniature CRISPR-Cas10-like enzyme, mCpol, uses a novel inverse signaling mechanism to prevent the spread of viruses that attempt immune evasion by depleting host cyclic nucleotides. Check it out:
loading . . .
A miniature CRISPR-Cas10 enzyme confers immunity by an inverse signaling pathway
Microbial and viral co-evolution has created immunity mechanisms involving oligonucleotide signaling that share mechanistic features with human anti-viral systems. In these pathways, including CBASS a...
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.03.28.646030v1
4
63
33
This was such a fun and insightful workshop! I love 10k Sciences mission to make science more accessible and easily understandable using the latest technology!
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 year ago
1
2
0
I had the pleasure of co-hosting this new career exploration podcast from ASBMB- tune in to hear from my fellow committee member Tom Kiselak about being a patent attorney!
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 year ago
0
5
3
you reached the end!!
feeds!
log in