Plastic Antibodies: Recent Advances in Molecular Imprinting
Friday, October 10, 2008 - 11:00 p.m. to Saturday, October 11, 2008 - 11:55 p.m.
ChEMS Seminar
Featuring Kenneth Shea, Ph.D.
Department of Chemistry
School of Physical Sciences
UC Irvine
Location: Information and Computer Science (ICS), Room 174
Free and open to the public
Abstract:
Molecular imprinting is a general protocol for creating receptor and/or catalytic sites in cross-linked network polymers. Imprinted polymers (MIPs) are chemically robust functional thermosets that can be used as chromatographic packings and sorbents for the binding, separation and isolation of targeted molecules. This talk will provide an introduction to molecular imprinting and focus on recent developments, including epitope imprinting, a general strategy for synthesizing materials for selective protein capture, and the synthesis and evaluation of “plastic” antibodies, nanosized polymer particles with antibody-like affinity in vitro and in vivo.
Share
Upcoming Events
-
MSE 298 Seminar: “You Can’t 3D Print That” as an Inspiration for New Technologies
-
CBE 298 Seminar: Dynamically Tunable Visible and IR Structural Colors
-
MSE 298 Seminar: Improving Coherence In Superconducting Qubits For Quantum Computing
-
EECS Seminar: Evaluating Generative AI in Healthcare
-
CEE Seminar: Machine Learning and Neural Networks for Porous Media and Materials - From Fluid Flow, Transport and Deformation to Learning the Governing Equations for Datasets