"The Mechanistic Determinants of Catalytic Bias in Cofactor-Based Enzymatic Oxidation-Reduction Reactions"
Date |
Topic |
Speaker |
8 Sept 2025 |
BDI Admin Update |
Sam Cahill, Martha Frantz, Crystal Garrett-McEwen, & Shelley Schaffer |
15 Sept 2025 |
BDI Summer Research Assistants |
Swapna Bodampati |
22 Sept 2025 | BDI Summer Research Assistants |
Brandon Deeb |
29 Sept 2025 | BDI Summer Research Assistants |
Daniel Grinffiel |
6 Oct 2025 |
BDI Travel Award Winner |
Spencer Lee |
13 Oct 2025 |
BDI Travel Award Winners |
Jesseca Hemminger |
20 Oct 2025 | BDI Travel Award Winners |
Abdul Rawoof |
27 Oct 2025 |
BDI Summer Research Assistant |
Neha Goud Baddam |
3 Nov 2025 |
10x Genomics |
Matt Alfaro |
10 Nov 2025 |
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Roisin McGarry |
17 Nov 2025 |
Lab Safety |
Veena Naik, Biosafety Officer |
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CANCELEDResearch and Bio Genetic engineering is undergoing a revolution, where next-generation technologies for DNA and host manipulation are enabling larger and more ambitious projects in biotechnology. Automated DNA synthesis has advanced to where it is routine to order sequences >100,000bp where every base is user-specified, the turnaround time is several weeks, and the cost is rapidly declining. Recently, this facilitated the synthesis of a complete 1 Mbp genome of a bacterium and its transfer into a new host, resulting in a living cell. However, while whole genomes can be constructed, the ability to design such systems is lagging. The focus of my lab is to develop new experimental and theoretical methods to push the scale of genetic engineering, with the ultimate objective of genome design. This will impact the engineering of biology for a broad range of applications, including agriculture, materials, chemicals, and medicine. Prof. Voigt obtained his Bachelor’s degree in Chemical Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and a PhD in Biochemistry and Biophysics at the California Institute of Technology. He continued his postdoctoral research in Bioengineering at the University of California, Berkeley. His academic career commenced as an Assistant and Associate Professor at the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the University of California-San Francisco. Chris Voigt joined the Department of Biological Engineering at MIT as Associate Professor in 2011. |
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