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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Understanding Elastins to Develop Therapies for Aging-Related Conditions

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Anna Tarakanova has long had an interest in how objects and bodies work. Her chosen  specialty in the field of Mechanical Engineering – studying the  structure, function, and mechanics of biological systems and materials,  especially fibrous protein materials such as elastin and collagen –  merges the two.

The assistant professor of mechanical engineering and her team are  working to establish a high-fidelity modeling framework for both healthy  and degenerated elastins for use as a tool to resolve different  pathological stressors affecting how elastin functions from a nanoscale.

During aging and with chronic, often age-related illnesses such as  diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and osteoarthritis, elastin can  degenerate, causing a decline in normal function. Elastin is an  essential structural protein that gives the skin, heart, blood vessels,  and other elastic tissues in the body the stretchy quality they need to  function.

“At the molecular scale, there are a number of physical-chemical  modifications that occur that drive this mechanical degeneration over  time,” Tarakanova says. “Because they are quite numerous and act in  parallel, it’s difficult to deconstruct which triggers impact mechanics  and to what degree. If we can understand the mechanism, we can think  about novel therapies to target aging and aging-associated diseases.”

Tarakanova’s work has earned her a 2022 Early Career Development  (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation. She is one of 11 junior faculty members at UConn this year to receive the coveted award, which recognizes the recipient’s potential as a role model in education and research.

CAREER Awards come with five years of funding intended to provide a  foundation for a young professor’s research program. Beyond advancing  her research, Tarakanova plans to use the funding to create activities  and events to engage and support undergraduate and graduate students,  especially those from underrepresented groups. The effort will include a  reboot of a Women In STEM Frontiers in Research Expo she co-organized with a colleague in January 2020.

“For me, it was kind of a natural extension of what I wanted to do as  a professor, being a woman in STEM and being a minority for most of my  education career,” Tarakanova says.

Elastin and collagen are not the only protein materials getting her  attention. Early in the pandemic, Tarakanova and two of her graduate  students began exploring the spike protein associated with SARS-CoV-2 to  figure out how it moved when it interacted with the immune system. She  is now working with Paulo Verardi, a pathobiologist in UConn’s College  of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources, and UConn biochemist Simon  White to develop new and potentially better ways to stabilize spike  proteins for use in COVID-19 vaccines, particularly in relation to  emerging new variants of the virus.

“Some of the methods we are using to study the spike protein are  related to the methods that we’ve used and continue to use to look at  elastin,” she says. “It’s a different project, but it does broadly fall  under this fusing of computing and computational models, physics,  biomechanics, and biochemistry to understand the dynamic behavior of the  COVID spike protein, the protein that sits on part of the corona.”

Original source can be found here.

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