program
March 15, 2019(Fri)
|
13:30-13:50 |
Opening Remarks and Introduction
Ryoichi Arai (Shinshu Univ.) &
Nobuyasu Koga (IMS, ExCELLS) |
13:50-14:25 |
Osami Shoji (Nagoya Univ.)
“Hydroxylation of Nonnative Substrates Catalyzed by Cytochrome P450BM3 Facilitated by Decoy Molecules” |
14:25-14:50 |
Daisuike Matsui (Toyama Prefectural Univ.)
“Rational identification of aggregation hotspots based on secondary structure and amino acid hydrophobicity” |
14:50-15:15 |
Naoya Kobayashi (ExCELLS)
“Cumulative thermostabilization of beta-glucosidase with structure-based sequence profile information” |
15:15-15:35 coffee break |
Special Lecture |
15:35-16:20 |
Michael Hecht (Princeton Univ.)
“Sustaining Life with Genes and Proteins Designed ‘From Scratch’ ” |
16:20-16:35 coffee break |
16:35-17:00 |
Shintaro Minami (ExCELLS)
“Design of new fold proteins yet-unexplored in nature"
|
17:00-17:35 |
Tomoaki Matsuura (Osaka Univ.)
“Engineering and characterizing membrane proteins using artificial cells”
|
17:35-18:00 |
Naohiro Terasaka (Univ. of Tokyo)
“Directed evolution of bacterial protein cages to package their own mRNA”
|
March 16, 2019(Sat) |
9:30-9:55 |
Daisuke Kuroda (Univ. of Tokyo)
“Exploring antibody designability through physicochemical analyses, mutagenesis and computations”
|
9:55-10:20 |
Takao Arimori (Osaka Univ.)
“Development of an artificially designed antibody fragment “Fv-clasp”
|
10:20-10:55 |
Munehito Arai (Univ. of Tokyo)
“Experimental and theoretical design of enzymes and binding proteins”
|
10:55-11:15 coffee break |
11:15-11:40 |
Yuta Shinohara (RIKEN)
“Design principles of temperature-compensated phosphorylation in the circadian clock”
|
11:40-12:15 |
Satoshi Akanuma (Waseda Univ.)
“Protein engineering experiments to explore the evolution of early life”
|
12:15-13:15 lunch |
13:15-13:50 |
Koki Makabe (Yamagata Univ.)
“Folding and Design of the Peptide Self-Assembly Mimics, PSAMs”
|
13:50-14:25 |
Paola Laurino (OIST)
“A journey from an ancient finger print of Rossmann fold enzymes to cofactor engineering”
|
14:25-15:00 |
Mitsuo Umetsu (Tohoku Univ.)
“Can proteins be engineered to generate a desired function from slim library ?” |