Professor of Physical Chemistry and Biophysics


1920 Professor of Physical Chemistry

Our research

We study the physical and chemical aspects of the behaviour of biopolymers and other soft systems. Much of our work has been focused on the physical aspects underlying the self-assembly of protein molecules. Self-organisation is the driving force generating complex matter in nature, and the process by which the machinery providing functionality in living systems is assembled. The goal of our research is to understand the physical and chemical factors which control the structures and dynamics of biomolecular assemblies, and the connections between the nanoscale characteristics of the component molecules and the physical properties of large-scale assemblies and their behaviour on a mesoscopic to macroscopic scale. The techniques used in our laboratory include biosensors, optical lithography, microfluidic devices and scanning probe microscopy and spectroscopy. We work both with natural and synthetic polymers and our interests range from fundamental chemical physics to technological applications in material science and molecular medicine.

Watch Professor Knowles discuss his research

Take a tour of the Sir Rodney Sweetnam laboratory

Publications

The Aβ40 and Aβ42 peptides self-assemble into separate homomolecular fibrils in binary mixtures but cross-react during primary nucleation
R Cukalevski, X Yang, G Meisl, U Weininger, K Bernfur, B Frohm, TPJ Knowles, S Linse
Chemical science
(2015)
6
A mechanistic model of tau amyloid aggregation based on direct observation of oligomers.
SL Shammas, GA Garcia, S Kumar, M Kjaergaard, MH Horrocks, N Shivji, E Mandelkow, TPJ Knowles, E Mandelkow, D Klenerman
Nat Commun
(2015)
6
Preventing peptide and protein misbehavior
P Arosio, G Meisl, M Andreasen, TPJ Knowles
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
(2015)
112
Structural characterization of toxic oligomers that are kinetically trapped during alpha-synuclein fibril formation
SW Chen, S Drakulic, E Deas, MM Ouberai, FA Aprile, R Arranz, S Ness, C Roodveldt, T Guilliams, GE De, D Klenerman, NW Wood, TPJ Knowles, C Alfonso, G Rivas, AY Abramov, JM Valpuesta, CM Dobson, N Cremades
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(2015)
112
Structural characterization of toxic oligomers that are kinetically trapped during α-synuclein fibril formation.
SW Chen, S Drakulic, E Deas, M Ouberai, FA Aprile, R Arranz, S Ness, C Roodveldt, T Guilliams, EJ De-Genst, D Klenerman, NW Wood, TPJ Knowles, C Alfonso, G Rivas, AY Abramov, JM Valpuesta, CM Dobson, N Cremades
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(2015)
112
A molecular chaperone breaks the catalytic cycle that generates toxic Aβ oligomers.
SIA Cohen, P Arosio, J Presto, FR Kurudenkandy, H Biverstål, L Dolfe, C Dunning, X Yang, B Frohm, M Vendruscolo, J Johansson, CM Dobson, A Fisahn, TPJ Knowles, S Linse
Nature structural & molecular biology
(2015)
22
The physical basis of protein misfolding disorders
TPJ Knowles, M Vendruscolo, CM Dobson
Physics Today
(2015)
68
Lipid vesicles trigger α-synuclein aggregation by stimulating primary nucleation.
C Galvagnion, AK Buell, G Meisl, TCT Michaels, M Vendruscolo, TPJ Knowles, CM Dobson
Nature chemical biology
(2015)
11
Protein Microgels from Amyloid Fibril Networks
U Shimanovich, I Efimov, TO Mason, P Flagmeier, AK Buell, A Gedanken, S Linse, KS Åkerfeldt, CM Dobson, DA Weitz, TPJ Knowles
ACS Nano
(2015)
9
A microfluidic platform for quantitative measurements of effective protein charges and single ion binding in solution.
TW Herling, P Arosio, T Müller, S Linse, TPJ Knowles
Phys Chem Chem Phys
(2015)
17

Co-Director

Research Interest Groups

Telephone number

01223 336344

Email address