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  Metabolic engineering tools for microorganisms in biotechnology


   Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering

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  Dr Jagroop Pandhal  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Microbial biotechnology is usually undertaken by a single species in a fermenter. However, some processes are metabolically challenging for a single species and therefore more suited to communities of microbes. However, the molecular tools to engineer these communities are sparse and the processes are usually controlled at only the process level (fermenter conditions like temperature and nutrient inputs) rather than the cellular level. The interspecies dynamics in these communities are largely considered a black box.

In the last decade there have been rapid advances in molecular tools to interrogate the interactions between microbes and model the process parameters and efficiencies.

This project aims to develop these tools and generate a paradigm shift in engineering microbial communities to be more efficient and productive. It will require transferring of knowledge from pure culture manipulations to multiple species and set a precedent for better knowledge of these processes. Techniques in forward and inverse metabolic engineering will be applied to synthetic microbial communities with the opportunity to present these to industries where biomanufacturing or bioremediation are a core focus. Techniques will include developing novel DNA delivery protocols, mass spectrometry driven proteomics, bioreactor cultures etc.

The successful candidate will receive training in metabolic engineering, molecular and synthetic biology experimental design and analysis and ‘omics technologies at the forefront of biomanufacturing. The project would suit a biosciences graduate with a strong interest in engineering biology or engineers with a strong interest in biological processes.

Applicants should have a First Class or Upper Second Class Honours degree in a biological or relevant engineering degree (e.g. microbiology, chemical engineering, environmental engineering) and excellent mathematical skills. If English is not your first language then you must have International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) average of 6.5 or above with at least 6.0 in each component.
See: http://www.shef.ac.uk/postgraduate/info/englang

For further details please contact the supervisor by email or phone.

Funding Notes

The DTG provides funds for studentships (full tuition fees + over £14,000 per year stipend for UK applicants, full tuition fees only for EU students) on a competitive basis. Applications are welcome up until the closing date. Overseas applicants will not qualify for DTG funding but self funded/externally funded applications are welcome

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