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Shohei Koide

Associate Professor, Biochemistry & Molecular Biophysics

Education:

B.Sc. University of Tokyo, 1986; Ph.D. University of Tokyo, 1991; Postdoctoral, The Scripps Research Institute

Lab Members:

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Contact Information:

Email:

Office:
929 E. 57th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
CIS W234
Phone: (773) 702-5073
Fax: (773) 702-0439

Lab:
929 E. 57th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
CIS W229C
Phone: (773) 702-5513

Shohei Koide

Research Summary / Selected Publications

The goals of our research are to elucidate factors governing molecular recognition events underlying protein function and to produce novel function by exploiting such knowledge. Current research topics include:

(i) Minimalist interaction interfaces. Protein-protein interactions are central to biological regulation. Natural protein interaction interfaces are large and complex. We aim to define the "minimalist" requirements for tight and specific interfaces (e.g. how large does an interface needs to be?; how much chemical and structural diversity is required for affinity and specificity?). Our research focuses on interactions mediated by surface loops, ubiquitously seen in antibodies and cytokine receptors. We employ iterative processes of engineering synthetic binding proteins by altering loops of a small protein and analyzing the structure and function of binding proteins. Our research has helped establish the concept of "molecular scaffolds" and the field of "antibody mimics."

(ii) Peptide self-assembly. Self-assembly of peptides into water-insoluble, beta-sheet-rich fibrils is implicated in protein misfolding diseases (e.g. Alzheimer's) and it is also a process leading to novel nanomaterials. We aim to understand contributions of various factors governing peptide self-assembly...

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Huang J, Koide A, Makabe K & Koide S (2008) Design of protein function leaps by directed domain interface evolution. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 105, 6578-6583.  Link

Gilbreth RN, Esaki K, Koide A, Sidhu SS & Koide S. (2008). A dominant conformational role for amino acid diversity in minimalist protein-protein interfaces. J Mol Biol, 381, 407-418.  Link

Biancalana M, Makabe K, Koide A & Koide S. (2009) Molecular mechanism of thioflavin-T binding to the surface of β-rich peptide self-assemblies. J Mol Biol, 385, 1052-1063.  Link

Dutta S, Koide A & Koide S. (2008) High-throughput analysis of the protein sequence-stability landscape using a quantitative "yeast surface two-hybrid" system and fragment reconstitution. J Mol Biol, 382, 721-733.  Link

Ye J, Fellouse FA, Koide A, Sidhu SS, Koide S, Kossiakoff AA & Piccirilli JA (2008) Synthetic antibodies for specific recognition and crystallization of structured RNA. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 105, 82-87.  Link

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