Researcher

Paola Laurino

所属:
大阪大学 蛋白質研究所 蛋白質デザイン研究室 客員教授
研究内容:
Studying the emergence and evolution of protein functions, focusing on enzymes

Google Scholar

About your research

My research group investigates how functions emerge and evolve in proteins, particularly enzymes. We examine the structural, biophysical, genetic, and biochemical aspects of protein evolution, using case studies that span from the origins of the earliest enzymes over 3.7 billion years ago to the rapidly emerging new protein functions. Our research aims to unravel complex biological processes and create innovative tools for science and technology.

Q&A

What are the unique aspects or strengths of your research?

Our research investigates how protein functions emerge and evolve, combining structural, biophysical, genetic, and biochemical approaches to study enzymes from ancient origins to modern innovations.

How do you think the results of your research will benefit society or industry?

By unraveling protein evolution and creating novel tools, our work has the potential to advance biotechnology, medicine, agriculture, and sustainable industrial processes.

How is data science utilized in your research?

Data science is used to predict protein structures, analyze evolutionary pathways, and model protein dynamics, enhancing our understanding of protein function and design.

Please share examples of collaborative research or the potential for future collaborations.

Our research offers opportunities for collaboration with biotech companies, academic labs, and synthetic biology experts to apply findings in real-world applications.

What are the prospects and goals for your research?

Our research aims to uncover the principles of protein evolution, design innovative enzymes, and develop tools that drive scientific and technological progress.

Selected papers

  1. Clifton, B. E.*; Alcolombri, U.; Uechi, G-I; Jackson, C.; Laurino, P.* The ultra-high affinity transport proteins of ubiquitous marine bacteria. Nature 2024, 634, 721- 728
  2. Weronika Jasinska†, Mirco Dindo†, Sandra M. Correa, Adrian W.R. Serohijos, Paola Laurino*, Yariv Brotman*, Shimon Bershtein* Non-consecutive enzyme interactions within TCA cycle supramolecular assembly regulate carbon-nitrogen metabolism. Nature Communications 2024 15, 5285
  3. Dindo, M.†; Bevilacqua, A.†; Soligo, G.; Calabrese, V.; Monti, A.; Shen, Q. A.; Rosti, M. Laurino, P.* Chemotatic interactions drive migration of membraneless active droplets. Journal of American Chemical Society 2024 146, 23, 15965-15976
  4. Kozome, D.; Sljoka, A.; Laurino, P.* Remote loop evolution reveals a complex biological function for chitinase enzymes beyond the active site. Nature Communications 2024, 15, 3227
  5. Toledo-Patino, S.; Pascarelli, S.; Uechi, G.; Laurino, P.* Insertions and deletions mediated functional divergence of Rossmann fold enzymes, PNAS, 2022, 119, 48, e2207965119.
  6. Gade, M. H.; Lynn Tan, L.; Damry, A. M.; Sandhu, M.; Brock, J. S.; Delanay, A.; Villar-Briones, A.; Jackson, C. J.*; Laurino, P.* Substrate dynamics contributes to enzymatic specificity in Human and bacterial methionine adenosyltransferases. Journal of American Chemical Society Au, 2021, 1, 12, 2349-2360.
  7. Clifton, B. E.; Fariz, M. A.; Uechi, G.; Laurino, P.* Evolutionary repair reveals an unexpected role of the tRNA modification m1G37 in aminoacylation. Nucleic Acid Res. 2021, 49, 21, 12467-12485.
  8. Testa A.†; Dindo, M.†; Rebane, A.; Nasouri, B.; Style, R.; Golestanian, R.; Dufresne, E.;* Laurino, P.* Sustained Enzymatic activity and Flow in Crowded Protein Droplets Nature Communications, 2021, 12, 6293.