Ellis:Research

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Latest Update: April 2010


Research in the Ellis Lab focuses on advancing biotechnology through the use of synthetic biology. Projects fall into one of two categories or belong in both:


  • 1. Foundational Synthetic Biology

Developing the tools for rapid, predictable engineering of biological devices and systems.

Examples: biopart design, assembly techniques and device synthesis, part and device characterisation, standardisation, chassis systems, mathematical models, design simulations


  • 2. Applied Synthetic Biology

Using the synthetic biology approach in biotechnology applications .

Examples: combinatorial synthesis of pathways, modular design of biosensors, cheap inducer systems for biosynthesis


Current Projects

Investigating device-chassis interactions
Project Type: Foundational
Project Members: Rhys Algar
Collaborators: Guy-Bart Stan
Most gene devices demonstrated in synthetic biology have been high-expression strength regulatory networks hosted on mid-to-high copy number plasmids in E.coli. Despite being relatively simple and small, these devices are thought to be close to the maximum tolerated by the host cell - if they were any larger they would impinge on the host cell's own mechanisms. In this project, we are trying to quantify the threshold for gene device cloning into the E.coli chassis by examining a standard synthetic feed-forward loop motif expressed at a variety of different strengths in plasmid systems of varying copy number. The intention is to define a quantitative standard for inserting gene devices into chassis cells and build a predictive model to aid future design.

Combinatorial modular assembly of a regulated Lycopene production pathway in yeast
Project Type: Foundational Applied
Project Members: Tom Ellis
The availability of gene synthesis is increasing rapidly, yet there is no straightforward lab-bench method to arrange modular gene units into larger assemblies with pre-defined positions. In this project we will demonstrate a new method to rapidly assemble gene units in a pre-defined order and showcase the technique to combinatorially assemble a synthetic lycopene synthesis pathway in yeast. The modular gene units in the lycopene synthesis pathway are driven by regulated promoters from a pre-existing library, and combinatorial assembly with these will produce pathways with a variety of metabolic fluxes. As well as demonstrating a rapid new assembly technique, the project will yield a synthetic yeast with high lycopene production.

Part characterisation for thermophilic bacteria
Project Type: Foundational
Project Members: Tom Ellis
Collaborators: David Leak
Synthetic Biology has had considerable success importing function from throughout nature into the industrial workhorse organisms of E.coli and yeast. However, one function desirable in industrial biotechnology - growth at high temperatures - would be almost impossible to introduce, as it would require radical rewriting of every gene to code for heat-resistance. The sensible alternative is to begin to describe synthetic biology for a thermophilic chassis. In this project we have identified an organism which we believe is the "E.coli of thermophiles" and intend to characterise bioparts for this chassis using flow cytometry with an engineered thermophilic GFP.