Stephen Kent (chemist)

Stephen B. H. Kent (born December 12, 1945, Wellington, New Zealand). Stephen Kent is best known for establishing the field of modern chemical protein synthesis. At The Scripps Research Institute in the early 1990s he introduced the chemical ligation concept: condensation of unprotected peptides, for the total synthesis of protein molecules. With his student Philip Dawson, he developed the native chemical ligation reaction for the covalent condensation of unprotected peptide chains linked by native peptide bonds Kent pioneered the study of mirror image protein molecules. His laboratory experimentally demonstrated that chemical synthesis of a protein's polypeptide chain using mirror-image D-amino acids, after folding results in a mirror-image D-protein molecule which, if the D-protein is an enzyme, will catalyze a chemical reaction with mirror-image stereospecificity. Kent was the inventor of mirror image drug discovery, the use of mirror image protein targets to discover novel chiral drug leads, and his laboratory pioneered the systematic development of D-protein molecules as candidate therapeutics. At the University of Chicago, Kent and his junior colleagues pioneered the elucidation of novel protein structures by quasi-racemic & racemic crystallography .