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Biological engineering

Channel | updated April 01, 2013

Advances in basic biology at the molecular and cellular levels during recent decades have dramatically increased the foundational information available on mechanistic underpinnings of biological systems. Indeed, the genomics revolution has accelerated the pace at which reductionist data is being generated. It is widely agreed that a crucial challenge for the coming decades is how to integrate information from the genomic level to higher levels of system organization, for both fundamental scientific understanding and development of innovative biotechnologies. Engineering disciplines are predicated on the complementary principles of analysis and synthesis, combining to elucidate quantitative "design principles" for the dependence of system behavior on component properties. The "measurement, modeling, and manipulation" approach that has characterized engineering disciplines based on the sciences of physics and chemistry is now finding the molecular and cellular life sciences accessible and amenable as well. Thus, a new discipline of biological engineering is emerging, directed toward analysis of biological systems in terms of key component properties and consequently toward synthesis of technologies that can beneficially modify and control such systems for societal benefit across many, diverse application areas including human and environmental health.

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Why science should be a story
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TEDxBeaconStreet: Science Should Be a Story — Tyler DeWitt

PhD candidate Tyler DeWitt discusses how scientists could better focus on communicating their main ideas through appealing narratives.

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Jeff Hrkach and Greg Troiano of BIND Biosciences explain how they make drug-delivering nanoparticles.

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Robert Langer on biomaterials for the 21st century
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Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor, discusses his research in material science and biomaterials at TEDxBigApple.

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Panel discussion on biological engineering approaches to ...
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Microbial Reistance 1 - Design Pitch
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Microbial Reistance 1 - Design Pitch

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TR35: Miriah Meyer
  • Biology,
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Meet 2011 TR35 Winner Miriah Meyer

Meyer presents her work at EmTech 2011: Extending data visualization to biology

Meet 2011 TR35 Winner Fan Yang
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Yang presents her work at EmTech 2011: Reprogramming stem cells to repair blood vessels Stanford University Injury and disease can damage blood vessels. But Fan Yang, a Stanford professor of bioengineering and orthopedic surgery, has developed

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  • Biological engineering,
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Meet 2011 TR35 Winner Christopher Bettinger

Bettinger describes his work at EmTech 2011: Tailoring polymers for biodegradable implants Carnegie Mellon University As a graduate student at MIT, Christopher Bettinger created strong, rubbery polymers that mimic natural tissue and can be tail

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Phillips describes his work at EmTech 2011: Computer-assisted genetic engineering Microsoft Research Synthetic biology offers the prospect of engineering microbes to fight disease or produce biofuels, but designing the necessary DNA instructions is normally an arduous task. With software ...

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Linking Oxidation to DNA Damage
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Linking Oxidation to DNA Damage

Professor John Essigmann describes how oxidation reactions in our bodies are both essential for life and responsible for cell damage that can potentially lead to cancer.

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John Essigmann's Personal Story
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Professor John Essigmann describes how an early industry experience doing real science pushed him to pursue a career as a professor and professional scientist.

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