Computing carbohydrates
JUN 29, 2021
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About

Elisa Fadda obtained her PhD in 2004 from the Department of Chemistry at the Université de Montréal under Professor Dennis R. Salahub. From May 2004 to May 2008, she worked as a post-doctoral fellow in Dr Régis Pomès group in Molecular Structure and Function at the Hospital for Sick Children (Sickkids) Research Institute in Toronto. From June 2008 until May 2013, Elisa worked as a research associate and honorary research lecturer in Prof Robert J. Woods group in the School of Chemistry at NUI Galway. In 2013 she was awarded a Post-Graduate Certificate in Teaching and Learning in Higher Education from the Centre for Learning and Teaching (CELT) at NUI Galway. In August 2013, Elisa became an Assistant Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry at Maynooth University, taking on a Lecturer position since 2014.

You will hear the following terms used during the interview. I've included some descriptions here. 

  • Quantum chemistry -The branch of chemistry that apply quantum mechanics to chemical systems, including electronic structure, molecular dynamics and Schrödinger equations.
  • Biophysics – And approach to science that applies methods typically used in physics to study biology and biological systems.
  • Glycoproteins – Proteins which contain oligosaccharide chains (glycans), attached to amino acid side-chains via a covalent bond.
  • Carbohydrates – Molecules (typically biological) composed of Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen, typically with a 2:1 Hydrogen:Oxygen atom ratio.
  • Glycan (or polysaccharide) – Compounds made of many monosaccharide subunits, linked via a glycoside bond.
  • N-Glycans – Glycans attached to a protein at an Asparagine residue via an N-glycosidic bond.
  • Sequon – A sequence of amino acids in a protein that serve as a carbohydrate binding site.The carbohydrate is often an N-linked-Glycan.
  • Asparagine, proline, serine, threonine. – Amino acids found naturally in biological proteins. Asparagine, serine and threonine are required in specific combinations to form a sequon, proline must be absent from a sequon.
  • Glycosaminoglycans or mucopolysaccharides- Long, linear glucans consisting of repeating disaccharide units – most commonly uronic acid and an amino sugar.
  • Glycosylation – A reaction in which a carbohydrate molecule is attached to a functional group of another molecule (such as a hydroxyl).  In biology the term typically refers to the carbohydrate being attached to a protein molecule.
  • Folded protein – Proteins have several levels of structure, secondary, tertiary (and arguably quaternary) levels of structure describe how the polypeptide chain forms into specific structures that typically confer functional properties.
  • Cryo-EM – Cryogenic Electron Microscopy studies samples cooled to cryogenic temperatures (-153 oC or lower), while embedded in vitreous water.
  • X-Ray crystallography – A technique which uses X-rays to determine crystal structures, but studying the X-ray diffraction patterns.
  • NMR – Nuclear Magnetic Resonance subjects samples to a strong magnetic fields and measures the resonance pattern of the nuclei. It is widely used to study the structure and dynamics of organic molecules.
  • Spike proteins – More properly ‘Peplomers’, spike proteins are glycoproteins that project from the surface of a virus particle lipid bilayer and play an important part in viral infectivity.
  • Coronavirus – One of a group of related RNA viruses that cause respiratory tract infections in birds and mammals. These infections lead to diseases that can have mild effects, or be lethal. The Covid-19 pandemic was caused by a coronavirus, the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The 2002/4 SARS outbreak was caused by the SARS-CoV-1 virus.
  • HIV – The Human Immunoseficiency Virus is two species of lentivirus that if left untreated cause Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in humans.
  • Receptor – A protein embedded in a cell membrane which binds to a specific molecule, or class of molecules.  Once the target molecule is bound, there is typically and effect within the cell to trigger some form of biological process.
  • (viral) Pathogensis – The process by which a disease progresses. Viral pathogensis is specific to a disease caused by a virus.
  • Computer node – Each computer in a connected cluster that are working together.
  • GPUs – Graphics Processing Units are specific electronic circuits that rapidly address memory in order to output images to a display device. Their highly parallel structure makes them efficient at processing algorithms that process large data blocks in parallel.
  • Glycoanalytics – Scientific study of glycosylated molecules, often biological in nature.
  • Neuraminidase, or SialidaseAre enzymes that cut the glycosidic bonds of neuraminic acids. This action helps viruses move through the respiratory tract mucus and infect host cells.

 

The publication we refer to early on in the discussion is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780128194751000560?via%3Dihub.  A full list of Elisa’s publications is available at her group website.

 

Elisa is contactable on social media, and you can find her on 
LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/elisa-fadda-a012b194/ (although, Elisa admits, she's rarely on LinkedIn)
On Twitter, search @ElisaTelisa
The group website is https://efadda73.wixsite.com/elisafadda

 

Our theme music is "Wholesome" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)

Music from https://filmmusic.io

License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

 

Connect with me (Paul) at https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulorange/

H.E.L. group can be found at 

www.helgroup.com

 online,

on LinkedIn at 

https://www.linkedin.com/company/hel-group/

 

on Twitter, we're @hel_group, 

https://twitter.com/hel_group

or search for us on Facebook

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