To all articles

Nautilus in the News

New podcast and video series – Translating Proteomics

Nautilus Biotechnology

Nautilus Biotechnology

April 4, 2024


Translating proteomics logo

“Translating Proteomics” explores the science of proteomics and its growing impact on biological research, biomarker discovery, drug development, food and energy security, and a range of other timely topics. The goal of these conversations is to expose you to important issues in proteomics, deepen your love of science, and prompt you to question assumptions about what may be possible.

Your hosts are Drs. Parag Mallick and Andreas Huhmer of Nautilus Biotechnology. Parag is an Associate Professor at Stanford University whose lab performs systems biology studies that drive precision medicine approaches for cancer diagnosis and treatment. Andreas is a veteran scientist whose industry work has supported thousands of proteomics researchers by helping to bring the latest mass spec technologies into their labs.

All Translating Proteomics episode links

Ep 1 – Poised for a Proteomics Breakthrough (You’re here)
Ep 2 – Putting Proteomics to Work
Ep 3 – Biology in Space and Time
Ep 4 – Single-protein Biomarkers Don’t Cut It
Ep 5 – Why the Dogma around Biology’s Central Dogma Is Wrong
Ep 6 – The Future of AI in Biomedicine
Ep 7 – Harnessing Proteoforms to Understand Life’s Complexity
Ep 8 – Expanding the Druggable Universe with Proteomics

Subscribe to Translating Proteomics on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or subscribe to our Translating Proteomics Newsletter to get the latest episodes delivered straight to your inbox.

Episode 1 – Poised for a proteomics breakthrough

The idea to measure the proteome to get a clear understanding of healthy and diseased tissues at the molecular level has been around for many years but has not come to fruition in a broadly accessible and applicable way. In this episode Parag and Andreas discuss:

  • Why now is the time to make this goal a reality
  • Why past efforts to broadly leverage proteomics did not work out
  • What we’ve learned from the past
  • What’s changed in proteomics and science in general that makes a proteomics breakthrough possible

Subscribe to the Translating Proteomics podcast on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast outlet

Share this Article

Stay up-to-date on all things Nautilus

World-class articles, delivered weekly

MORE ARTICLES

Stay up-to-date on all things Nautilus

Subscribe to our Newsletter