- Nicola Pohl
- Administrative Assistant
- Ph.D. Students
- Postdoctoral Fellows
- Undergraduate Students
- Visiting Scholars
- Former Members
- Group Information
- Publications
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Our
group
(picture from February 2008) |
Our group is finding new
ways to make and analyze sugars to dissect their important roles in plant,
animal, and human biology and in biomass production. One major long-term goal is
to rationally design therapeutic interventions such as vaccines based on a
deeper knowledge of these carbohydrate interactions. Most recently, we have
created the first automated solution-phase method to readily synthesize
oligosaccharides using methodologies that we are applying to other
biologically active molecules. This automated method circumvents key problems
encountered with the solid-phase approaches that allowed commercial automated
synthesis of other biopolymers like DNA and peptides. We have also discovered
that the same fluorocarbon tag that facilitates our automated synthesis can be
used to directly surface-pattern these tagged molecules to form carbohydrate
microarrays for screening against carbohydrate-binding proteins. In addition,
the group has found several extremely heat-stable enzymes analyzed by
mass-spectrometry-based assays to make carbohydrate structures. Ames, Iowa is
also home to the Plant Sciences Institute, an excellent veterinary school and
the National Animal Disease Center – a setting that allows an easier transition
of our basic science work into applications.
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