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EUSynBioSeminars
In May 2020, we launched our online seminar series called EUSynBioSeminars. We invite researchers from the academic and industrial synthetic biology community to give short presentations about their research or applications. Interested in an upcoming talk or in giving a talk yourself? Click Learn More!
EUSynBioMap
We’re mapping all of the synthetic biology research laboratories, institutions and organisations across Europe. Is your favorite lab missing from the map? Click Learn More to let us know or fill in the information form provided to help us complete our map.
SynBio Calendar
Take a look at our comprehensive events calendar for general and specialised conferences, workshops and meetups happening around the world!
Something is brewing . . .
We are working on a synbio-hackathon & networking platform that will bring communities together to solve challenges that matter and make a difference. Teams with winning projects will get a chance to bring them to life.
In case you missed it…
We published our first review!
Recently the EUSynBioS Steering Committee published its first review titled:
‘Synthetic biology in Europe: current community landscape and future perspectives’.
We discuss the progress synthetic biology has made in Europe from an academic and industrial view-point, as well as the vibrant community organisations based on the continent - including EUSynBioS!
Video background: “Microscopic blue particles undulate and blur” by Vecteezy
🦠 Can Microbes live on air? Have you ever hear of aerotrophy? Watch the video to find more about microbial oxidation and its possible cool applications.
In our monthly Seminars we have with us Prof. Chris Greening from the University of Monash, Australia.
🦠 Can Microbes live on air? Have you ever hear of aerotrophy? Watch the video to find more about microbial oxidation and its possible cool applications.
Abstract:
The atmosphere provides most of the oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen essential for life, yet has long been considered too energy-poor to sustain microbial activity. Research by our team has demonstrated that diverse microbes can survive by harvesting trace amounts of hydrogen and carbon monoxide from air using high-affinity enzymes. Focusing on Mycobacterium smegmatis as a model organism, we have elucidated the physiological role, genetic regulation, and structural basis of this metabolic strategy. Our findings show that many microbes and ecosystems are variably partially or primarily powered by atmospheric energy sources. Building on this work, we are developing applications to support a circular bioeconomy, including whole-cell biocatalysis and the in vitro generation of electricity and ATP from air. These discoveries redefine the minimal requirements for life with broad scientific and technological implications.