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Department of Chemistry

Hans Renata

Professor of Chemistry

Associate Chair for Graduate Studies

Despite rapid advances in synthetic organic chemistry, many classes of small molecules remain inefficient to access using conventional methods. Enzymatic reactions, on the other hand, offer unparalleled potential for highly selective chemical transformations. By combining the power of modern enzyme engineering tools and advances in genome mining, The Renata laboratory aims to develop practical enzymatic solutions for traditionally challenging organic reactions, especially in the realm of C–H functionalization chemistry. The utility of these transformations will be showcased in the concise, scalable synthesis of bioactive natural products and their analogues, which in turn will serve as potential leads in drug discovery efforts or novel chemical probes to interrogate various cellular processes. These goals are pursued through collaborative efforts that take advantage of the uniquely interdisciplinary ecosystem at Scripps Research. Research projects are designed to be multi-faceted, providing students with broad exposure to synthetic organic chemistry, molecular biology, enzyme engineering and medicinal chemistry to ensure that they are well-equipped for future careers in both academia and industry.

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Average rating

3.3

20 temporary mock ratings

Difficulty

3.4

course-linked average

Courses

5

in seeded sections

Public profile

Biography

Despite rapid advances in synthetic organic chemistry, many classes of small molecules remain inefficient to access using conventional methods. Enzymatic reactions, on the other hand, offer unparalleled potential for highly selective chemical transformations. By combining the power of modern enzyme engineering tools and advances in genome mining, The Renata laboratory aims to develop practical enzymatic solutions for traditionally challenging organic reactions, especially in the realm of C–H functionalization chemistry. The utility of these transformations will be showcased in the concise, scalable synthesis of bioactive natural products and their analogues, which in turn will serve as potential leads in drug discovery efforts or novel chemical probes to interrogate various cellular processes. These goals are pursued through collaborative efforts that take advantage of the uniquely interdisciplinary ecosystem at Scripps Research. Research projects are designed to be multi-faceted, providing students with broad exposure to synthetic organic chemistry, molecular biology, enzyme engineering and medicinal chemistry to ensure that they are well-equipped for future careers in both academia and industry.

Research areas

Chemical Biology, Organic Synthesis, Chemistry of Life

Courses taught

CHEM 007

Visiting Research

Research conducted by visiting student scholars. Repeatable for Credit.

ChemistryNone0 credits
3.54.5hKolomeisky, Anatoly, Ma, Yuan, Mou, Quanbing, Renata, Hans, Sarlah, David, Shee, James, Xiao, Han, Yruegas, Samantha

CHEM 462

Enzyme Mechanisms

This class will discuss the organic chemistry that is involved in the production of primary and secondary metabolites. The reactivity patterns and the underlying logic for different enzyme families will be provided, along with the roles of cofactor, from the perspective of mechanistic organic chemistry. Cross-list: CHEM 562. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for CHEM 462 if student has credit for CHEM 562.

ChemistryNone3 credits
3.68.7hRenata, Hans

CHEM 562

Enzyme Mechanisms

This class will discuss the organic chemistry that is involved in the production of primary and secondary metabolites. The reactivity patterns and the underlying logic for different enzyme families will be provided, along with the roles of cofactor, from the perspective of mechanistic organic chemistry. Cross-list: CHEM 462. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for CHEM 562 if student has credit for CHEM 462.

ChemistryNone3 credits
3.010.0hRenata, Hans

CHEM 800

Graduate Research

Repeatable for Credit.

ChemistryNone1-15 credits
3.97.7hAjayan, Pulickel, Alvarez, Pedro, Bagchi, Kushal, Ball, Zachary, Bao, Gang, Dai, Mingjie, Diehl, Michael, Gustavsson, Anna-Karin, Hafner, Jason, Halas, Naomi, Han, Yimo, Hartgerink, Jeffrey, Hernandez Sanchez, Raul, Hulet, Randy, Igoshin, Oleg, Jones, Matt, Kampouri, Stavroula, Kolomeisky, Anatoly, Kurti, Laszlo, Lou, Jun, Ma, Yuan, MacKintosh, Frederick, Marciel, Amanda, Marti-Arbona, Angel, Martin, Lane, Masiello, Carrie, Matsuda, Seiichi P., McHugh, Kevin, Mikos, Antonios, Mohite, Aditya, Morosan, Emilia, Mou, Quanbing, Nevidomskyy, Andriy, Nienhaus, Lea, Nordlander, Peter, Onuchic, Jose, Pasquali, Matteo, Renata, Hans, Sarlah, David, Scuseria, Gustavo, Shee, James, Tour, James, Wang, Haotian, Weisman, Bruce, West, Julian, Wittung Stafshede, Pernilla, Wolynes, Peter, Wong, Michael, Xiao, Han, Yakobson, Boris, Yruegas, Samantha

SSPB 800

Graduate Research

Graduate students will conduct independent research/thesis project under the direction of their advisor. Repeatable for Credit.

Systems/Synthetic/Phys BiologyNone1-15 credits
3.35.8hAjo-Franklin, Caroline, Alvarez, Pedro, An, Linna, Bao, Gang, Bashor, Caleb, Bennett, Matthew, Butts, Jessica, Chappell, James, Dai, Mingjie, de Moraes, Marcos, Diehl, Michael, Gao, Yang, Glasscock, Cameron, Gollihar, Jimmy, Gustavsson, Anna-Karin, Hilton, Isaac, Igoshin, Oleg, Iyer, Harini, Kalluri, Raghu, Kavraki, Lydia, Kiang, Ching-Hwa, Kimmel, Marek, Kirienko, Natasha, Kolomeisky, Anatoly, Lavery, Laura, Li, Lei, Lieberman-Aiden, Erez, Loveless, Theresa, Lu, George, Luan, Lan, Ma, Yuan, MacKintosh, Frederick, Masiello, Carrie, Mou, Quanbing, Nakhleh, Luay, Nikonowicz, Edward, Onuchic, Jose, Phillips, George, Raphael, Rob, Renata, Hans, Robinson, Jacob, Segatori, Laura, Shamoo, Yousif, Silberg, Joff, St. Pierre, Francois, Stadler, Lauren, Szablowski, Jerzy, Tabor, Jeffrey, Tang, Evelyn, Tao, Yizhi, Thyer, Ross, Treangen, Todd, Uribe, Rosa, Veiseh, Omid, Vlassakis, Julea, Warmflash, Aryeh, Wolynes, Peter, Xiao, Han, Xie, Chong, Yao, Vicky

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