User:ClarkeS: Difference between revisions
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==Projects== | ==Past Projects== | ||
*My first project was the [[Orthogonal cloning of clpXP]] from ''E. coli'' into yeast. So far I've been more successful at learning molecular biology and techniques by making mistakes than at cloning into yeast. | *My first project at MIT was the [[Orthogonal cloning of clpXP]] from ''E. coli'' into yeast. So far I've been more successful at learning molecular biology and techniques by making mistakes than at cloning into yeast. This work is continuing in someone else's more capable hands. | ||
Revision as of 06:40, 21 June 2006
Bio
Sean Clarke
saclarke at MIT
I am a first-year Biological Engineering (BE, MIT Course XX) graduate student. I have passed my qualifying exam and joined the Alm lab. I worked in the Endy Lab in the summer of 2005. This summer I am formulating a thesis project directed at engineering stress tolerance.
I'm the first-year class representative to the BE graduate student board, so I am open to suggestions about improving the first-year experience.
- B.S.M.E., University of Texas at Austin, biomedical technical area
- B.A., University of Texas at Austin, Plan II Liberal Arts Honors Program
- Fulbright grant, Milan, Italy, independent study of industrial and engineering design methods, and classes in biomaterials at the Politecnico di Milano
My background is in mechanical engineering and design, but not of things quite as small as BioBricks.
Potential research topics
- Scaling of engineered biology
- Replicating biological machines
- Technologies/vocabularies to make biological engineering easier
- Biomimicry, bioscaffolds for material processing
- Recycling/"cradle to cradle" design of biological systems
- Usability of biological design software or methods
- Biomineralization
Classes
- BE.420
- BE.430
- 7.81 Systems Biology
- 18.085 Applied Math for Engineers
Past Projects
- My first project at MIT was the Orthogonal cloning of clpXP from E. coli into yeast. So far I've been more successful at learning molecular biology and techniques by making mistakes than at cloning into yeast. This work is continuing in someone else's more capable hands.