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Organic Chemistry Seminar

Wednesday, May 27, 2015
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Noyes 153 (J. Holmes Sturdivant Lecture Hall)
Structure, Function, and Inhibition of Bacterial Cell Walls and Biofilms: Lessons from Small Molecules and a Big Magnet
Lynette Cegelski, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Stanford University,

The bacterial cell wall is essential to cell viability and is a major target of antibiotics.  Beyond the cell wall and the cell surface, bacteria secrete proteins and polysaccharides to enmesh themselves in a protective biofilm matrix that enhances bacterial resistance to antibiotics.  As heterogeneous, insoluble polymeric matrices, cell walls and biofilms pose a challenge to analysis by conventional methods.  We are developing new approaches to dissect composition in cell walls and whole cells and to transform vague biofilm descriptors into quantitative parameters of chemical and molecular composition.  In our drug discovery efforts, we have identified small-molecule biofilm inhibitors and are examining their influence on biofilm formation and on pathogenesis in vivo.  I will discuss these and our emerging discoveries inspired by the urgent need for new strategies to treat infectious diseases, integrating bacteriology, biochemistry, and whole-cell NMR, specifically targeting E. coliStaphylococcus aureus, and Vibrio cholerae.

For more information, please contact Lynne Martinez by phone at 626-395-4004 or by email at [email protected].