Thursday, December 5, 2013

Undergraduate Research Positions Spring 2014

Research Positions for Undergraduates, Spring term 2014

The Bommarius lab seeks undergraduate students interested in challenging research!

The Bommarius laboratory (ChBE, CHEM, Bioengineering) specializes in biocatalysis, green chemistry, protein stability, and biochemical engineering.  We seek self-motivated, hard-working student researchers interested to continue for a PhD and/or MD after college, to work on cutting-edge research problems and to learn new skills.

Eligibility:                                                                              
i)       graduation date (B.S.) between 05/15 and 12/16 in BIOL, ChBE, or CHEM
ii)      GPA at Georgia Tech > 3.30, preferably > 3.5
iii)     basic laboratory skills, enthusiasm, self-motivation, flexibility, independence
iv)     start in Spring 2014 for credit, continuation during summer possible and expected

Interested?:    Please email resume (incl. i) major, ii) GPA, and iii) expected graduation date) to mentor and to Prof. Andreas S. Bommarius (andreas.bommarius@chbe.gatech.edu).

Interviews with mentor:       any time; feedback: less than 1 day later; decision asap after agreement among student, mentor, and faculty advisor

We have positions available on the following projects:

  1. Isolation and Purification of Penicillin G Acylase

Penicillin G Acylase (PGA) is an enzyme used in industry for the generation of beta-lactam nuclei such as 6-aminopenicillanic acid, then used to produce semisynthetic beta-lactam antibiotics (BLAs); PGA has the capability to synthesize (and hydrolyze) BLAs such as penicillins. However, as well studied as this enzyme is, an efficient protocol for its purification is still needed to perform further investigations including protein engineering to extend its substrate range.  The role of the student will be to develop a protocol for enzyme purification and will learn fermentation, chromatography, and protein assays.  This project requires knowledge of biochemistry.        Mentor: Marietou Paye (mfpaye@gatech.edu)


  1. Converting glucose dehydrogenase into alcohol dehydrogenase using protein engineering

Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), one of the most versatile biocatalysts, and glucose dehydroge-nase (GDH) share a common structure and catalytic mechanism.  Our goal is to demonstrate an example of divergent protein evolution while generating novel enzymes useful in the synthesis of pharma intermediates.  We already have several GDH variants that need to be tested for alternative substrate specificity and then expand the sequence space via mutation to generate new variants converting the enzyme towards an alcohol dehydrogenase. 
The student will learn a host of methods, such as bacterial expression, protein purification using immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), as well as characterization of new enzyme variants via SDS-PAGE for purity assessment, protein concentration assays, and activity assays (UV-VIS, HPLC, GC).  The student will learn how to manipulate DNA to generate new variants using overlap extension PCR.  The project will require knowledge of organic chemistry, biochemistry, and some kinetics.

Mentors: Dr. Bettina Bommarius (bettina.bommarius@chbe.gatech.edu) and Samantha Au (sau3@gatech.edu)