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Engineering Biology in Cambridge

 
Read more at: Cambridge to Lead UK Contributions to a New International Research Centre for Enhancing Plant Resilience
A close-up photo of golden ears of wheat

Cambridge to Lead UK Contributions to a New International Research Centre for Enhancing Plant Resilience

3 October 2024

Cambridge researcher Dr Nicola Patron has been awarded a share of over £2 million to lead the UK’s contribution to a new global centre working to address urgent agricultural problems and explore sustainable solutions for agriculture.


Read more at: Interested in Connecting with Local Industry?
Photo of a sculpture of DNA. The photo is looking down the centre of the double helix spiral. The bases are bright fluorescent tubes glowing with light.

Interested in Connecting with Local Industry?

3 September 2024

The EngBio IRC are looking for a student or postdoc with an innovative mindset to lead a new project exploring synthetic and engineering biology opportunities within the Cambridge biotechnology cluster.


Read more at: Cambridge Scientists Improve Microalgae Cultivation
Illustrative figure of five cubes filled with green sphere of algal agregates. The spheres decrease in size and increase in density through the sequence.

Cambridge Scientists Improve Microalgae Cultivation

3 September 2024

Researchers at the University of Cambridge have investigated the photonic properties of hydrogels embedded with microalgae and the resulting improved efficiency of algal growth within. They hope to scale up algal productivity for commercial applications and novel material synthesis.


Read more at: Engineering Cancer Therapeutics
Flouresence microscopy image of a cancer cell surrounded by killer T cells, illustrating how CAR-T therapies work. Image courtesy of the NIH Image library.

Engineering Cancer Therapeutics

22 July 2024

Can we apply engineering biology principles to develop kinder, more effective treatments for cancer ? From innovative CAR-T therapies, to new tools for drug discovery and potential new treatments. Learn more about the University of Cambridge researchers exploring precision medicines for cancer.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: SeedGerm
Microscopy image of seeds germinating with roots pseudo-coloured to indicate germination time

Open Technologies Highlight: SeedGerm

10 June 2024

Thinking about how to speed up and reduce errors in seed phenotyping, Prof Ji Zhou and his colleagues at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany (NIAB) have develeoped SeedGerm. This is an imaging tool that combines cost-effective hardware and open source software to improve the efficiency of seed germination analysis. This process is important in a wide range of crop science research.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: Autohaem
Photo of 3D printed disks with the word 'Autohaem' on them. The disks are bright red and look like blood cells.

Open Technologies Highlight: Autohaem

8 May 2024

Autohaem was developed by Dr Samuel McDermott as a low-cost open-source solution for preparing blood smear samples. The project aims to improve automation of sample preparation in low-resource environments using the OpenFlexure microscope.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: OpenPlant Kit
Close up photo of the liverwort marchantia polymorpha. Image credit Jim Haseloff

Open Technologies Highlight: OpenPlant Kit

10 April 2024

Dr Eftychios Frangedakis and his colleagues in the Dept. Plant Sciences have developed the OpenPlant Kit, a series of resources and techniques that simplifies genetic engineering in plants. These tools can be used for applications such as crop development and bioproduction in plants.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: CellphoneDB

Open Technologies Highlight: CellphoneDB

19 February 2024

Hoping to improve our understanding of cell-to-cell communications, Dr Roser Vento-Tormo and her team have developed CellPhoneDB. This an open database of ligand-receptor-interactions and an accompanying analysis tool to help identify interactions in single-cell RNAseq data.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: In vivo sensing of pH in tomato plants

Open Technologies Highlight: In vivo sensing of pH in tomato plants

23 January 2024

Precision agriculture can provide farmers with valuable information about their crops and help improve yields. Researchers Antonio Ruiz Gonzales and Prof. Jim Haseloff are developing a low-cost open-source pH sensor to help directly monitor stress in plants.


Read more at: Open Technologies Highlight: OSAIRIS

Open Technologies Highlight: OSAIRIS

18 December 2023

Hoping to improve the time consuming process of manually annotating patient’s radiotherapy scans, Dr Rajesh Jena and Microsoft Research used artificial intelligence and machine learning to develop OSAIRIS, one of the first pieces of open source software to be clinically approved and deployed as a medical device.