Home / Department / Seminars & Events / Matthew Shoulders

Matthew Shoulders

Matthew Shoulders

Seminar
Thu, Mar. 15, 2018, 4:30pm
Carl C. Icahn Lab, Room 101
Host: Mohammad Seyedsayamdost

Protein Folding Challenges in Biomolecule Assembly and Evolution

Our group is broadly interested in understanding how metazoan cells fold complex proteins. The development of chemical genetic techniques to allow precision engineering of proteostasis network composition and activities will be discussed. Applications of these techniques have enabled a variety of advances related to the folding and quality control of large extracellular matrix proteins such as collagen, including the discovery of a molecular code that controls assembly of the fibrillar collagens. Progress in understanding the roles of proteostasis in evolution at the host-pathogen interface will also be presented. Of particular interest, we found that the biophysical consequences of host chaperone depletion very strongly reduce the ability of influenza to escape innate immune system factors. The connections drawn between host proteostasis and viral evolution have potentially important implications for issues including viral host-switching, vaccine development, and the design of improved antiviral therapeutic strategies.