Synthetic amino acids: Beginning of engineering life’s superpowers
Singularity Hub - 08-Jun-2021New bacteria: virtually resistant to all viral infections
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Programme Leader at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge University.
Jason Chin is currently a Programme Leader at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology (MRC-LMB), where he is also Head of the Centre for Chemical & Synthetic Biology (CCSB). He is Professor of Chemistry & Chemical Biology at the University of Cambridge, and holds a joint appointment at the University of Cambridge Department of Chemistry. He is also a fellow in Natural Sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge.
Jason is a native of the UK. He was an undergraduate at Oxford University, where he worked with Professor John Sutherland on Cephalosporin biosynthesis. He obtained his PhD as a Fulbright grantee from Yale University, working with Professor Alanna Schepartz on the design and evolution of miniature proteins. He was a Damon Runyon Fellow at The Scripps Research Institute with Professor Peter Schultz where he developed the first approaches to systematically expand the genetic code of eukaryotic cells and pioneered approaches, that are now widely used, for defining protein interactions by genetically encoding photocrosslinking amino acids.
Visit website: https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/ccsb/jason-chin/
See also: University of Cambridge - Collegiate research university in Cambridge, United Kingdom
Details last updated 20-Dec-2019
New bacteria: virtually resistant to all viral infections
Organisms can survive even with a simple genetic code