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Faculty Candidate Seminar: “Development of Tools Enabling Tunable, in situ Delivery of Therapeutics Using Probiotics”

January 26, 2017 | 10:40 am - 11:40 am EST

Faculty Candidate Seminar (Microbiomes cluster hire)

“Development of Tools Enabling Tunable, in situ Delivery of Therapeutics Using Probiotics”

Dr. Nathan Crook
Department of Pathology and Immunology
Washington University in St. Louis

The human large intestine houses trillions of microorganisms which collectively form the highly diverse microbial community known as the gut microbiota. The gut microbiota performs many functions critical to the maintenance of health, including extraction of nutrients from food, production of vitamins, and defense against pathogens. Like an organ, disturbances to the structure of the gut microbiota can have significant negative impacts to the human host, including obesity, malnutrition, and cancer. However, the gut microbiota is currently unique among organs in that it is highly engineerable, enabling improvement of function by substituting beneficial microbes for less desirable ones. These exogenous beneficial microbes are termed “probiotics” and their close contact with both their human host, as well as other gut bacteria, raises exciting therapeutic prospects, including the provision of additional metabolic functions, modulation of the host immune response, or competitive exclusion of pathogens. However, these applications remain out of reach due to insufficient metabolic activities of engineered strains, as well as the low residence time of most probiotics within the gut. In this talk, I will first describe a high-throughput method which accelerates gene and pathway evolutionary engineering through an in vivo, continuous process. Then, I will show exciting data from a culture-independent bioprospecting approach for increasing the residence time and altering the biogeography of probiotic strains within the gut. Taken together, this work has the potential to significantly improve our understanding and use of probiotics while providing a framework for developing robust chassis strains for future synthetic biology efforts in the human gut microbiota.

Note: Refreshments will be served from 11:40 am-Noon in the Faculty & Staff Lounge.

Details

Date:
January 26, 2017
Time:
10:40 am - 11:40 am EST
Event Categories:
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Website:
https://cals.ncsu.edu/event/faculty-candidate-seminar-nathan-crook/