Horizon Europe (2021 - 2027)

A calorimeter at atomic resolution: CLAR

Last update: Mar 22, 2023 Last update: Mar 22, 2023

Details

Locations:Austria
Start Date:Jun 1, 2023
End Date:May 31, 2028
Contract value:EUR 2,955,000
Sectors:Laboratory & Measurement, Research, Science & Inn ... See moreLaboratory & Measurement, Research, Science & Innovation
Categories:Grants
Date posted:Mar 22, 2023

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC)

Topic(s): ERC-2022-COG - ERC CONSOLIDATOR GRANTS

Call for proposal: ERC-2022-COG

Funding Scheme: ERC - Support for frontier research (ERC)

Grant agreement ID: 101087826

Objective:

Molecular interactions are at the basis of all biological processes and often include specific interactions between macromolecules (protein, RNA, DNA) and smallmolecule ligands, such as cofactors, hormones, drugs, or metabolites. Detailed and quantitative knowledge of these interactions is critical for a molecular understanding of these biological processes and developing new therapeutic solutions. A complete comprehension of molecular recognition requires a full characterization of the geometry and dynamics of the molecular complex. This includes not only the internal dynamics of each partner but also the dynamics at the interface, which to date remain mostly unexplored experimentally. The physical chemistry frame for studying intra- and inter-molecular interactions is thermodynamics. The extent to which two molecules interact is dictated by the Gibbs energy change (ΔG) of the interactions, which is composed of enthalpic (ΔH) and entropic (ΔS) terms. X-ray crystallographic and NMR structures provide a detailed description of the static interactions associated with enthalpic contributions. However, up to now, the entropic components remain difficult to address experimentally. The overarching goal of this proposal is to develop a calorimeter at atomic resolution. To achieve that goal, a new NMR spectroscopy approach, relying mainly on the nuclear Overhauser effect, will be developed. It is anticipated that quantitative thermodynamic measurements within molecules and molecular complexes will open a new avenue in the fundamental understanding of how atomistic mechanism(s) create a function. Beyond the fundamental findings, we foresee applications in translational medicine, drug design, and computer-assisted molecular design.

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