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Research Vision of the Kastritis Laboratory for Biomolecular Research

Enzymopathies are metabolic disorders, often genetic, resulting from  missing or defective enzymes. In order to prevent, combat or repair  defective enzymes that lead to disease, it is vital that we understand  the structure, function and interactions of enzymes and their complexes,  ideally within their native cellular context.
In their native cellular environment, enzymes are neither isolated nor  randomly distributed. Instead, they co-compartmentalize, and often  transiently interact to form supercomplexes of metabolic pathways  (commonly referred to as metabolons). The formation of metabolons allows  the intermediate product from one enzyme to be passed directly into the  active site of the next consecutive enzyme of the metabolic pathway.  Their role and existence were biochemically known for years but due to  their sheer size and transient nature, understanding their molecular  organization remains a challenge. As a consequence, traditional  structural biology methods have helped us in understanding the structure  and function of their constituent enzymes but not their higher-order  assembly and how their interfaces are formed.
My research vision is to understand the molecular architecture of  metabolons by integrating structural, biophysical, biochemical and  biocomputational methodologies. This multidisciplinary approach aims at  elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underpin cellular respiration  in atomic details. In the long term, these methodologies will allow  discerning cellular metabolons by visualizing their components and  examining the interactions between the molecules that form the  assemblies.
This research will ultimately provide new crucial insights not only to  cellular respiration but also an entirely new view of cell mechanisms in  general. The unsolved mystery of temporal and spatial synchronization  of a myriad of protein subunits to perform a specific cellular function  may be rationalized by the formation of supercomplexes. These  unprecedented entities provide a whole new avenue for targeted drug  design. Rather than targeting the active sites of individual subunits  -which share many physical and chemical characteristics thus  compromising specificity- I envisage a therapeutic strategy that targets  the interface between proteins in the supercomplex that are likely to  be unique.

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