EUSynBioSeminars
Since May 2020, we have been hosting this online seminar series, where we invite researchers from the synthetic biology community to give short presentations about their most recent work. The aim is to offer a platform for a wide range of topics related to synthetic biology, accessible to everyone for free.
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Upcoming Seminars

EUSynBioSeminar: "Multihost, multiplasmid genetic logic library: What happens in E.coli, stays in E.coli"
Join the next #EUSynbioSeminar on the 30th of March at 16:00 CET and hear Dr. Lewis Grozinger from the Polytechnic University of Madrid (UPM) give a talk titled "Multihost, multiplasmid genetic logic library: What happens in E.coli, stays in E.coli"
Register here to join us the 30th of March at 16:00 CET

EUSynbioSeminar: "In silico metabolic engineering for increased production of +100 chemicals in yeast cells, what have we learned?"
Join us for our next EUSynbioSeminar and hear Iván Domenzain, from Jens Nielsen’s lab, speak about “In silico metabolic engineering for increased production of +100 chemicals in yeast cells, what have we learned?”
Register here to join us the 23rd of February at 16:00 CET

EUSynBioSeminar: “Biosaftey in Synthetic Biology: A Genetic Firewall Metric”
EUSynBioS seminars are back! Our first speaker of 2023 is CEO/Founder of BioFacation, Dr. Markus Schmidt.
Dr. Markus Schmidt has an interdisciplinary background in biomedical engineering, biology and technology assessment. He initiates and executes a number of projects dealing with responsible research and innovation in emerging science and technology areas, bringing together various stakeholders from science, regulation, industry, civil society and art. Markus’s talk is entitled ‘Biosaftey in synthetic biology: a genetic firewall metric’.
Register here and join us on January 19th at 16:00 CET
Rahmi Lale is an academic at the Department of Biotechnology and Food Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in Trondheim, Norway. He is also the co-founder and CEO of Syngens, an NTNU spin-off operating at the intersection of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Synthetic Biology.
At NTNU, he leads an interdisciplinary lab that integrates biophysics, computational, and synthetic biology. His primary research focus is on understanding and controlling transcriptional and translational regulation in various microorganisms, ranging from bacteria to higher eukaryotes.
At Syngens, he leverages the predictive power of AI to engineer biological systems for biomanufacturing applicati