Congratulations to Dr Jiaul Islam, the lead author on our paper entitled "Design of Polarity-Dependent Immunosensors Based on the Structural Analysis of Engineered Antibodies", published today in ACS Chemical Biology. This work represents a multi-disciplinary effort, including co-authors from Monash University, Memorial Sloak Kettering Cancer Centre in New York (MSKCC) and the Australian Synchrotron. Importantly, the initial project was supported by funding from the Churchill Trust, awarded to A/Prof Corrie to undertake a sabbatical in Prof Daniel Heller's lab at MSKCC, under the 2018 Leslie (Les) J. Fleming Churchill Fellowship. Dr Islam was also able to spend several months in New York to undertake experiments critical for the paper. Aside from demonstrating that our engineered antibody platform is applicable to more than just the EGFR test case, Jiaul also showed that he could switch out the Anap dye (a visible wavelength emitter) with a near infrared dye, allowing detection of cTnI in spiked human plasma.