I am posting this for Shanteri Singh a faculty member here at OU.   Please 
direct any questions to her.


Postdoctoral position available immediately in Singh Group at OU.
Biochemist or Structural Biologist: Seeking a highly motivated postdoc with 
experience in one or more biochemical techniques involving cloning, protein 
expression, purification, biochemical assays, X-ray crystallography, structure 
calculations, and functional characterization of enzymes. The ideal applicant 
should have a Ph.D. in Biochemistry or related area. The candidate should have 
expertise in determining X-ray structures of enzymes, functional 
characterization, and engineering studies for their potential as biocatalysts 
for drug development. The focus of the position is to contribute to our ongoing 
interrogation of substrate specificity and synthetic utilities of 
prenyltransferases.  If you are interested in applying, please email your CV to 
shanteri.si...@ou.edu<mailto:shanteri.si...@ou.edu>
Research Overview in Singh Group
Research in the Singh laboratory lies at the interface of chemistry and 
biochemistry. We use tools and methods from biochemistry and structural biology 
to characterize new enzymes from natural product biosynthetic pathways; 
molecular biology techniques to engineer enzymes to generate better 
biocatalysts; and synthetic chemistry methods for the generation of precursors 
necessary for natural product diversification. The fundamental goal of research 
in Singh laboratory is to understand and exploit natural product enzymes for 
developing biologically active molecules against cancer and infectious 
diseases. Our lab is especially interested in exploiting the ability of late 
stage enzymes from natural product biosynthetic pathways for the structural 
diversification of complex natural products. Despite the fact that structural 
diversification of biologically active molecules by attaching different 
chemical moieties has great potential to generate new drug leads, chemical 
methods often suffer from selectivity and tedious purification steps. Our goal 
is to exploit the potential of natural product enzymes and generate 
chemoenzymatic-tools for facile attachment of chemical moieties in a stereo- 
and regio- selective fashion to complex molecules towards the generation of 
biologically active compounds.


Leonard Thomas, Ph.D.
Macromolecular Crystallography Laboratory
Oklahoma COBRE in Structural Biology
Price Family Foundation Institute of Structural Biology
University of Oklahoma
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Stephenson Life Sciences Research Center
101 Stephenson Parkway
Norman, OK 73019-5251
Office: (405)325-1126
lmtho...@ou.edu<mailto:lmtho...@ou.edu>
http://structuralbiology.ou.edu/mcl


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