Key Facts

Abstract:
Nature uses a limited set of twenty amino acids to synthesize proteins. In recent years it has become possible to site-specifically incorporate designer amino acids with tailored chemical properties into proteins in living cells by reprogramming the genetic code. Together with developments in designing chemical reactions that are applicable to and selective within living systems, these strategies have begun to have a direct impact on studying biological processes.
In this talk I will present our lab’s efforts to expand the genetic code and to endow proteins with novel chemical moieties within their physiological environment. By site-specifically incorporating artificial designer amino acids into proteins, we have developed tools to image and probe proteins, to study protein-protein interactions and stabilize low-affinity protein complexes, to investigate posttranslational modifications and to re-engineer and manipulate molecular networks and biological pathways such as ubiquitylation and SUMOylation in living cells.
We envision that these approaches and technologies will enable the study of biological processes that are difficult or impossible to address by more classical methods.
Bio:
Kathrin Lang studied Chemistry at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. She obtained a PhD in 2008 in Chemistry from the University of Innsbruck, working on chemically modified RNA to investigate riboswitch folding and ribosome catalysis. In 2009 she moved to Cambridge, UK, where she was first a postdoctoral researcher in the group of Venki Ramakrishnan (Nobel prize winner in Chemistry in 2009) working on ribosome crystallography (2009-2010) and then in the lab of Jason Chin doing research in chemical and synthetic biology at the MRC-LMB in Cambridge, UK.
In 2014 she was appointed as Rudolf Mössbauer W2 Tenure Track Professor at the Technical University of Munich, Germany, where she was tenured and promoted to permanent W3 Professor for Synthetic Biochemistry in 2020.
Since 2021 she is Full Professor of Chemical Biology at the ETH Zürich, Switzerland and since 2024 she heads the Institute of Organic Chemistry at ETH Zürich. She serves as Senior Editor for ACS Accounts of Chemical Research.
Kathrin Lang has received several prestigious awards and fellowships, including an ERC Consolidator Grant, the Miklós Bodanszky Award of the European Peptide Society, the Otto Meyerhof Award of the German Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, the Arnold Sommerfeld of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, the Thieme Chemistry Award, and the FEBS Anniversary Award of the Federation of European Biochemical Sciences.