Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology
- Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology
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The Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology (CSSB) brings together UT researchers across a range of disciplines to quantitatively understand and engineer the regulatory networks underlying organismal biology.
Our research interests include:
- Disease: Developing computer models to better understand a multitude of human diseases and crop traits.
- Drugs: Discovering drugs based on genetic modules shared between humans and organisms as distant as yeast.
- Developing diagnostics for resource-limited settings using smart molecular amplifiers.
- Immunity: Using cutting-edge genome sequence technology to map immune responses.
- Emerging viruses: Finding methods to predict the emergence of the next threats.
- Molecular computation: Developing programmable molecules that contribute to sensors, amplifiers, and organismal operating systems.
Research at the CSSB is focused on the integration of genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics data—offering a more unified view of organisms as integrated networks. Such systems-wide, interdisciplinary approaches allow us to better define the functions of genes, and to accelerate the discovery of new pathways that are critical for various traits and diseases.
Selected projects include: Diagnostics for Developing Markets. Discovering New Disease Genes, Pathways, and Drugs.
HIV/AIDS: An Ongoing Global Pandemic. Two of their contributions to this field are already being translated to public health:
- Development of a synthetic gene that protects against HIV, which is now under therapeutic development for the treatment of AIDS.
- Identification of new genes in the human genome that may help define disease progression. These genes are currently part of a large, ongoing HIV/AIDS association study being conducted using HIV/AIDS cohorts.
Emerging Disease: We are currently focusing on influenza, arenaviruses, and Dengue. We are interested in the host genes that make certain species and individuals more prone to infection by these and other viruses.
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Brett J Baker
Associate ProfessorDwight W. and Blanche Faye Reeder Centennial Fellowship in Systematic and Evolutionary Biology (Holder)Microbial diversity, ecology, and evolutionJeffrey E Barrick
ProfessorBenjamin Clayton Centennial Professorship in Biochemistry (Holder)Microbial experimental evolution and synthetic biologyZ J Chen
ProfessorD. J. Sibley Centennial Professorship in Plant Molecular Genetics (Holder)Genomics and Epigenetics of Polyploidy and Hybrid VigorBryan W Davies
ProfessorLorene Morrow Kelley Professorship in Microbiology (Holder)We investigate protein-based antibiotics and bacteria-host interactions.Lauren I Ehrlich
ProfessorL. Leon Campbell, Ph.D. Distinguished Professorship in Microbiology (Holder)Thymocyte: stromal cell interactions in T cell development and T-ALLAndrew Ellington
ProfessorWilson M. and Kathryn Fraser Research Professorship in Biochemistry (Holder)Ryan S Gray
Associate Professor, Associate Professor of PediatricsKatherine Ross Richards Centennial Teaching Fellowship in Nutrition (Holder)We study the development cell biology and genetics regulating spine development and disorders.Amelia W HallI am a 5th year graduate student in the Iyer lab. At present, I study epigenetic regulation in brain cancer.Jonghwan Kim
ProfessorD. J. Sibley Centennial Professorship in Plant Molecular Genetics (Fellow)Transcriptional and epigenetic regulations in Pluripotent stem cells and trophoblast lineage developmentEdward M Marcotte
Professor, Affiliated Faculty, Oden InstituteMr. and Mrs. Corbin J. Robertson, Sr. Regents Chair in Molecular Biology #1 (Holder)Andreas Matouschek
Associate Dean, ProfessorMechanisms of protein machines, protein folding, unfolding, and degradation.Howard Ochman
ProfessorJoseph J. & Jeanne M. Lagowski Regents Professorship in Molecular Bioscience (Holder)David Soloveichik
Associate ProfessorTemple Foundation Endowed Faculty Fellowship No. 4 (Holder)Dynamic DNA nanotechnology; chemical and unconventional computation.Christopher S Sullivan
ProfessorLorene Morrow Kelley Professorship in Microbiology (Fellow) | Lorene Morrow Kelley Endowed Faculty Fellowship Fund (Holder)Our lab seeks to understand how viruses interact with the host non-coding RNA machineries to replicate, induce tumors, and cause pathogenesiDavid W Taylor Jr
Associate ProfessorMarvin L. Hackert Professorship in Biochemistry and Structural Biology (Fellow)Directly visualizing molecular machinesJohn B Wallingford
ProfessorMr. and Mrs. Robert P. Doherty, Jr. Regents Chair in Molecular Biology (Holder)We combine in vivo imaging with systems biology to explore the cell biological basis of embryonic developmentClaus O Wilke
ProfessorJane and Roland Blumberg Centennial Professorship in Molecular Evolution (Holder)Computational evolutionary biology, Molecular evolution, Virus evolution.