Princeton Engineering Mark Brynildsen
Princeton Engineering Mark Brynildsen We focus on two key areas: bacterial persistence toward antibiotics and increasing bacterial susceptibility to immune attack. bacterial persistence: bacterial persistence is a non genetic, non inherited (epigenetic) ability in bacteria to tolerate antibiotics. professor of chemical and biological engineering, princeton university cited by 8,652 bacterial persistence antibacterials nitric oxide metabolic engineering.
Princeton Engineering Mark Brynildsen Dr. mark p. brynildsen is professor of chemical and biological engineering at princeton university and a core faculty member of the omenn‑darling bioengineering institute, where he also holds an associated faculty role in the department of molecular biology. Research interests: bacterial persistence, host pathogen interactions, network biology of bacterial stress. Brynildsen served two years as chair of the division, in 2023 and 2024. he was also the division 15 vice chair in 2021 and 2022, and chaired the bioengineering area of the division in 2020. Mark brynildsen professor of chemical and biological engineering and the omenn darling bioengineering institute.
Mark Brynildsen Princeton Engineering Brynildsen served two years as chair of the division, in 2023 and 2024. he was also the division 15 vice chair in 2021 and 2022, and chaired the bioengineering area of the division in 2020. Mark brynildsen professor of chemical and biological engineering and the omenn darling bioengineering institute. My group seeks to accomplish this by using computational and experimental techniques in systems biology and metabolic engineering to develop novel, fundamental understanding of the molecular mechanisms and networks pathogens use to thwart immune antimicrobials and antibiotics. We use both experimental and computational techniques in systems and synthetic biology to understand and address the global public health crisis of antibiotic resistance. the phenomena we study are bacterial persistence to antibiotics and bacterial responses to immune antimicrobials. B.s. in chemical engineering, 2002 rutgers university, new brunswick ph.d. in chemical engineering, 2008 university of california, los angeles postdoctoral associate, 2008 2010 howard hughes medical institute boston university. Fingerprint dive into the research topics where mark philip brynildsen is active. these topic labels come from the works of this person. together they form a unique fingerprint.
Comments are closed.