ɬ﷬

Award

Kuhlman solves protein puzzles
with a modeling program

Elizabeth Stivison
April 1, 2019

The ɬ﷬ has given the 2019 DeLano Award for Computational Biosciences to , a professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. The award recognizes scientists whose work excels in two key elements: “more productive use of computers to accelerate and facilitate research, and ready access of these programs for the scientific community.”

Brian Kuhlman

“What a fantastic honor! Warren DeLano’s software, PyMOL, is a terrific example of what can be achieved by making research tools easily accessible. It has been very rewarding to contribute to the Rosetta software and community in the same way, and it is exciting to see all of the wonderful proteins that are being designed with Rosetta.”

— BRIAN KUHLMAN

Kuhlman’s studies have done exactly that; of the National Cancer Institute wrote in her nomination letter, “I cannot think of a more deserving recipient than Prof. Kuhlman.”

Kuhlman’s work can be described broadly as using computers and computational biology to design new protein structures and functions. As a postdoc in David Baker’s laboratory, Kuhlman created a protein design module in the molecular modeling software Rosetta. As a professor, he has continued to advance the uses of Rosetta in several forms: protein interface design, antibody assembly and engineering photoactivatable proteins. He makes the modules available to all researchers.

In the field of protein interface design, Kuhlman’s lab has redesigned proteins to increase their affinity to binding partners and has designed interfaces that allow previously nonbinding proteins to bind each other or other substrates they would not typically bind. This has achieved binding with micro to nanomolar affinities, and the experimentally determined structures of his designed interfaces typically were quite similar to his models, showing how effective his modeling techniques are. This work and his freely available Rosetta modules open the doors for many researchers to use these ideas in countless other fields.

of the Weizmann Institute of Science wrote in support of the nomination that Kuhlman “is known for driving technology as well as using it in biologically important applications.”

Kuhlman’s group has worked to solve the longstanding problem of creating bispecific antibodies, antibodies that bind two different antigens, by creating a novel protocol for multi-state protein design. They generated two different light and heavy chains with orthogonal interfaces that can be assembled with high fidelity. This has significant potential in any field where two cellular structures need to be brought in close proximity, including cancer immunotherapy.

The lab is also working on creating protein switches that can be turned on or off using light with high spatial and temporal resolution. They are designing these switches to control intracellular localization, gene expression and differentiation.

Kuhlman is known among his colleagues as an innovative and reliable scientist, an effective and wise collaborator, and a superb speaker. This is shown in his high (and increasing) number of citations, his many papers written in collaboration with other labs and the many talks he gives around the world.

Kuhlman will receive his award during the ASBMB annual meeting at the Experimental Biology 2019 conference in Orlando, where he will deliver an award lecture titled “Designing novel protein structures and interactions with Rosetta” at 1:45 p.m. April 9 in Valencia Ballroom A at the Orange County Convention Center.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Elizabeth Stivison

Elizabeth Stivison is a careers columnist for ASBMB Today and an assistant laboratory professor at Middlebury College.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

Hope for a cure hangs on research
Essay

Hope for a cure hangs on research

July 17, 2025

Amid drastic proposed cuts to biomedical research, rare disease families like Hailey Adkisson’s fight for survival and hope. Without funding, science can’t “catch up” to help the patients who need it most.

Before we’ve lost what we can’t rebuild: Hope for prion disease
Feature

Before we’ve lost what we can’t rebuild: Hope for prion disease

July 15, 2025

Sonia Vallabh and Eric Minikel, a husband-and-wife team racing to cure prion disease, helped develop ION717, an antisense oligonucleotide treatment now in clinical trials. Their mission is personal — and just getting started.

ASBMB members recognized as Allen investigators
Member News

ASBMB members recognized as Allen investigators

July 14, 2025

Ileana Cristea, Sarah Cohen, Itay Budin and Christopher Obara are among 14 researchers selected as Allen Distinguished Investigators by the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.

AI can be an asset, ASBMB educators say
Advice

AI can be an asset, ASBMB educators say

July 9, 2025

Pedagogy experts share how they use artificial intelligence to save time, increase accessibility and prepare students for a changing world.

ASBMB undergraduate education programs foster tomorrow’s scientific minds
Feature

ASBMB undergraduate education programs foster tomorrow’s scientific minds

July 8, 2025

Learn how the society empowers educators and the next generation of scientists through community as well as accreditation and professional development programs that support evidence-based teaching and inclusive pedagogy.

Honors for Gagna and Sundquist
Member News

Honors for Gagna and Sundquist

July 7, 2025

Claude Gagna is being honored for the diagnostic tool he developed that uses AI to streamline diagnostics. Wesley Sundquist is being honored for his role in finding that HIV’s capsid was a target for treatment.