• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Departments
    • Bioengineering
    • Civil and Environmental Engineering
    • Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences
    • Industrial Engineering and Operations Research
    • Materials Science and Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Nuclear Engineering
    • Aerospace program
    • Engineering Science program
  • News
    • Berkeley Engineer magazine
    • Social media
    • News videos
    • News digest (email)
    • Brand & Press kit
  • Events
    • Cal Day
    • Commencement
    • Events calendar
    • Engineering Ethics workshop
    • Homecoming
    • Kuh Lecture Series
    • Minner Lecture
    • Space reservations
    • View from the Top
  • College directory
  • For staff & faculty
Berkeley Engineering

Educating leaders. Creating knowledge. Serving society.

  • About
    • Facts & figures
    • Rankings
    • Mission & values
    • Equity & inclusion
    • Voices of Berkeley Engineering
    • Leadership team
    • Milestones
    • Buildings & facilities
    • Maps
  • Admissions
    • Undergraduate admissions
    • Graduate admissions
    • New students
    • Visit
    • Maps
    • Admissions events
    • K-12 outreach
  • Academics
    • Undergraduate programs
    • Majors & minors
    • Undergraduate Guide
    • Graduate programs
    • Graduate Guide
    • Innovation & entrepreneurship
    • Kresge Engineering Library
    • International programs
    • Executive education
  • Students
    • New students
    • Advising & counseling
    • ESS programs
    • CAEE academic support
    • Grad student services
    • Student life
    • Wellness & inclusion
    • Undergraduate Guide
    • > Degree requirements
    • > Policies & procedures
    • Forms & petitions
    • Resources
  • Research & faculty
    • Centers & institutes
    • Undergrad research
    • Faculty
    • Sustainability and resiliency
  • Connect
    • Alumni
    • Industry
    • Give
    • Stay in touch
Home > News > New rules

New rules

berkeley engineer magazine cover with ken goldberg holding robotics
May 11, 2026
This article appeared in Berkeley Engineer magazine, Summer 2026
  • In this issue
    Ken Goldberg in a brown coat, holding a 3D printed object. The object is also being held by a robot

    The art of grasping

    Pallets on fire

    From forest to front door

    Purple led lights from the ceiling lights the room up in purple as a crowd looks from above

    Let there be light

    Mark Asta, UC Berkeley College of Engineering interim dean, wearing a black suit smiling and looking at the distance

    Where ideas come to life

    Upfront

    • New rules
    • Microbes with a mission
    • Robots that reconfigure
    • Back to the elements
    • Straight to the heart
    • When the shaking stops
    • The making of a Nobel Prize

    New & noteworthy

    • William Tarpeh named 2025 MacArthur Fellow
    • Reimagining rehabilitation
    • Three professors, nine alums named to NAE
    • Farewell
    • Support Berkeley Engineering
    • Built by Bears. Powered by ingenuity.
  • Past issues

heart deviceFor more than seven years, Ting Xu, professor of materials science and engineering and of chemistry, has been trying to figure out how to design synthetic polymers with protein-like behaviors. Now, she and a multi-institutional team of researchers have unlocked “design rules” that upend long-held views on polymers and could pave the way for eco-friendly plastics and other materials.

The researchers, including MIT professor Alfredo Alexander-Katz, discovered something “wild” when they set out to design polymers as synthetic enzymes: Though their synthetic enzyme couldn’t fold like a natural protein, and its underlying molecular structure was slightly different, it could still mimic the behavior of a natural enzyme.

According to Xu, the key lies in the polymer’s ability to bend, twist and easily change the shape of its carbon “backbone.” This flexibility not only compensated for any structural differences between the lab-created and natural versions, but it also enabled the synthetic enzyme to surpass the functional capabilities of a natural enzyme.

Using this mechanism, researchers hope to “re-imagine the plastics industry” and reduce its environmental impact, as well as design new materials that can do things that natural enzymes can’t — like safely break down antibiotics that pollute our waterways.

“This foundational knowledge will enable us to produce functional polymers that meet technological needs in a range of areas, from the life sciences and energy to the environment,” said Xu.

Learn more: Researchers uncover new rules for designing protein-like polymers; Random heteropolymers as enzyme mimics (Nature)

 

Topics: Materials science, Industry, Research, Sustainability & environment
  • Contact
  • Give
  • Privacy
  • UC Berkeley
  • Accessibility
  • Nondiscrimination
  • instagram
  • X logo
  • linkedin
  • facebook
  • youtube
  • bluesky
© 2026 UC Regents