Professor Ronald Raines FRSC
Winner: 2022 Chemistry Biology Interface Division open award: Khorana Prize
Massachussetts Institute of Technology
For translating fundamental chemical understanding of collagen into the life sciences and towards the clinic.
Celebrate Professor Ronald Raines
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We live in a tangible world, and chemistry is the science of the tangible. Chemists are privileged in having the ability to create new molecules and new materials that can benefit the world in a real sense.
A protein is a string of amino acids that folds into a three-dimensional structure. Proteins perform the molecular functions that are necessary for life. These functions include catalysis of biochemical reactions (by enzymes), neutralisation of foreign toxins (by antibodies), stimulation of cellular activity (by hormones), and provision of a scaffold for the bodies of animals (by collagen).
Professor Raines' work has uncovered unappreciated forces that stabilise the three-dimensional structures of all proteins, and generated synthetic collagens that are stronger and longer than any found in nature. His team has also converted a human RNA-cleaving enzyme into a clinical anti-cancer agent, and developed processes to synthesise proteins, catalyse their folding, and facilitate their entry into human cells.
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