Danica Galonić Fujimori (Serbian: Даница Галонић Фуџимори) is a Serbian-American chemical biologist who is a professor at the University of California, San Francisco. Her research considers nucleic acid synthesis and tissue engineering. In the search for new therapeutics and vaccines, she has studied the interactions between ribosomes and SARS-CoV-2.

Early life and education

Galonić Fujimori earned her undergraduate degree at the University of Belgrade. She moved to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign for her doctoral research, where she earned a PhD in biochemistry. Her research considered the development of two strategies for site-selective peptide modification.[1] She then moved to the Harvard Medical School where she worked alongside Christopher A. Walsh.[2]

Research and career

Galonić Fujimori has studied various biological processes, including chromatin formation, transcriptional regulation and DNA repair.[3] Methylation impacts the regulation of biological processes, and the deregulation of methylation is associated with various diseases. As such, understanding and exploiting enzymatic regulation of methylation could provide an opportunity for therapeutic intervention.[4] She has studied Jumonji domain-containing histone-lysine demethylases, complex proteins which catalyze the removal of methylation marks on the lysine residues of multiple histones can contain chromatin reader domains. These reader domains interact with chromatin, an interaction which is modulated by chromatin modifications.[4] To probe the cellular function of the Jumonji family, the Galonić Fujimori laboratory develop small molecule inhibitors. She proposes that these molecules can be used to inhibit the aberrant demethylation that occurs in certain diseases.[4] She has investigated the methylation of RNA, and how this impacts the cellular function of RNA.[4]

Fujimori investigates how bacteria acquire immune responses to antibiotics.[5] She has focused her efforts on antibiotics that target the ribosome of bacteria, which is involved with protein synthesis. Antibiotics such as linezolid bind to sites such as the peptidyl transferase center, blocking protein biosynthesis.[5]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Galonić Fujimori started working on virus-host interactions in response to SARS-CoV-2. She showed that bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) proteins were involved in the body's response to COVID-19 infection.[6] She started working on pharmaceuticals to tackle future pandemics.[7]

Awards and honors

Selected publications

  • Carsten Krebs; Danica Galonić Fujimori; Christopher T Walsh; J Martin Bollinger (2 June 2007). "Non-heme Fe(IV)-oxo intermediates". Accounts of Chemical Research. 40 (7): 484–492. doi:10.1021/AR700066P. ISSN 0001-4842. PMC 3870002. PMID 17542550. Wikidata Q34633429.
  • Danica P Galonić; Eric W Barr; Christopher T Walsh; J Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs (14 January 2007). "Two interconverting Fe(IV) intermediates in aliphatic chlorination by the halogenase CytC3". Nature Chemical Biology. 3 (2): 113–116. doi:10.1038/NCHEMBIO856. ISSN 1552-4450. PMID 17220900. Wikidata Q57837771.

References

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