Professor Frances Brodsky’s research group published a paper titled ‘Genetic diversity of CHC22 clathrin impacts its function in glucose metabolism’ in eLife on 4th June.
The paper is available in full here.
Professor Frances Brodsky’s research group published a paper titled ‘Genetic diversity of CHC22 clathrin impacts its function in glucose metabolism’ in eLife on 4th June.
The paper is available in full here.
Congratulations to Gorjan Stojanovski and Hugo Villanueva, who were awarded prizes for their research presentations at this year’s ISMB Graduate Symposium. The Symposium was held in the Clore Management Centre at Birkbeck on Thursday 25th and Friday 26th April.

Gorjan, from Professor John Ward’s group, presented on ‘Applying bacterial competition to evolve novel antibiotics.’

Hugo, from Dr. Renos Savva’s group, presented on ‘Refactoring phages as repurposed nanomachines.’
Dr Salvador Tomas has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Project Grant to study and develop lipid vesicle-based, stimuli-responsive nanoreactors
Lipid vesicles resemble empty cells, a starting point where to build up programmable cell-like robots by the step-wise addition of molecular machinery. Developing such robots requires that we understand how chemical transformations are influenced by confinement within the boundaries of lipid vesicles. Dr Tomas research group has recently reported evidence that confinement promotes the very chemical reactions that enable the assembly of complex molecular machinery, essential to the function of natural and artificial cells. The aim of the project is to characterise rigorously this confinement effect and to exploit it to build cell-like devices programmed to perform chemical reactions in response to specific external stimuli.
More information about Dr Tomas’s research can be found on his ISMB profile.
November 2018
The ISMB’s Dr Tine Arnvig has been awarded an MRC grant to investigate ‘Conditional termination of transcription in Mycobacterium tuberculosis’. The aim of the project is to 1. define transcriptional terminator motifs on a global scale in the human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis and 2. to investigate post-transcriptional control of gene expression associated with inherent drug-resistance genes and anti-TB drugs.
Above: Left panel illustrates the principle of regulated or conditional termination, leading to expression of genes under specific growth conditions only. Right panel shows cording M. tuberculosis (photo credit Robin Chamberland).
Moreover, Tine will be hosting a research fellow, Terry Kipkorir, for two years from March 2019. Terry has been awarded a Newton International Fellowship with Tine as co-applicant, and he will be working at the SMB on post-transcriptional regulation of methionine metabolism in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.