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What if two nearly identical GPCRs make a worse chimera than two receptors from completely different classes? Charlotte Crauwels is building computational tools to find out why — and to predict which designs will work before they reach the bench.
Crauwels develops in silico pipelines for chimeric GPCR design at the Free University of Brussels. Her work sits at the interface of computational prediction and experimental validation, addressing a problem the field has struggled with for decades: chimeric constructs are powerful but unpredictable, and the data surrounding them is scattered, inconsistently named, and poorly annotated. After spending over a year collecting and standardizing published chimeric GPCR data, she built GPCR ChimeraDB — one of the first public databases dedicated to these constructs.
Key takeaways:
Dr. GPCR Links & Resources
By Dr. Yamina Berchiche4.8
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What if two nearly identical GPCRs make a worse chimera than two receptors from completely different classes? Charlotte Crauwels is building computational tools to find out why — and to predict which designs will work before they reach the bench.
Crauwels develops in silico pipelines for chimeric GPCR design at the Free University of Brussels. Her work sits at the interface of computational prediction and experimental validation, addressing a problem the field has struggled with for decades: chimeric constructs are powerful but unpredictable, and the data surrounding them is scattered, inconsistently named, and poorly annotated. After spending over a year collecting and standardizing published chimeric GPCR data, she built GPCR ChimeraDB — one of the first public databases dedicated to these constructs.
Key takeaways:
Dr. GPCR Links & Resources

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