Lee Hood
@ISBLeeHood helped build the tools that made modern biology possible. Now he’s taking on the dark proteome.
“The enormous revolution that will come in the next 10 years about peptide drugs will absolutely transform the entire pharmaceutical industry.”
That is the prediction Leroy Hood is bringing to the
#SynBioBeta Main Stage.
Leroy Hood will be speaking at SynBioBeta 2026, May 4-7th in San Jose, California, you can learn more about the conference and get your tickets here:
lnkd.in/gkMTHA5e
Few scientists have earned the right to call a new frontier. Hood helped develop the automated DNA sequencer that enabled the Human Genome Project. He helped build the peptide synthesizer that supported the development of the first generation of HIV protease inhibitors. He has founded or helped launch companies including Amgen
@Amgen , Applied Biosystems, and now a non-profit
@PhenomeHealth. He also co-founded the Institute for Systems Biology
@isbsci .
Now, he is turning his attention to the dark proteome.
The human genome contains roughly 20,000 protein-coding genes, but the resulting proteome may contain close to a million distinct proteins once alternative splicing and post-translational modifications are taken into account. Most of those proteoforms remain invisible to the tools biology relies on today.
That is the next layer Hood wants to read.
At SynBioBeta, he will join
@jendionne of
@Stanford University and
@Pumpkinseed Technologies,
@susanklaeger of
@genentech , and
@mkoeris of
@DARPA for a Main Stage session on the dark proteome and why protein sequencing may become the next frontier in biology.
This is exactly why being in the room matters.
Relationships are built in the room. Deals happen in the room. Breakthroughs happen in the room.
You can read about the dark proteome online. But the people building the tools, companies, and therapeutic platforms around it will be in San Jose.
Visit the
#SynBioBeta website to read the full article
lnkd.in/gHJTQrvu