Bristol DNA Polymerase Doodling Discovery | AcademicJobs UK
University of Bristol researchers discover DNA polymerases can 'doodle' complex untemplated sequences, paving the way for advanced synthetic biology applications.
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Thomas Gorochowski is Professor of Biological Engineering in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Bristol. He holds a PhD in Engineering Mathematics from the University of Bristol (2012), an MRes in Complexity Sciences from the University of Bristol (2009), and an MEng in Computer Science from the University of Warwick (2004). His research focuses on developing experimental and computational approaches to reprogram living cells and biological collectives, with interests in synthetic biology, genetic circuits, biocomputation, and complex systems.
Prior to his current role, Gorochowski held positions including Turing Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute, Co-Director of the Bristol BioDesign Specialist Research Institute and the Bristol Centre for Engineering Biology, BrisSynBio Research Fellow at the University of Bristol, Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at DSM Biotechnology Centre. He was appointed Professor of Biological Engineering in 2022 and has been a Royal Society University Research Fellow since 2017. His work has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals, and he contributes to leadership roles such as membership of the UKRI-BBSRC Transformative Technologies Strategy Advisory Panel and the Scientific Steering Committee for the Synthetic Biology Open Language.
University of Bristol researchers discover DNA polymerases can 'doodle' complex untemplated sequences, paving the way for advanced synthetic biology applications.