Difference between revisions of "Drew Endy"

From Stanford SSI Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Professor Endy is a faculty member in the Stanford Bioengineering Department and the Biology Team Faculty Advisor. His lab works on various synthetic biology proje...")
 
(added picture of endy)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Professor Endy is a faculty member in the Stanford Bioengineering Department and the [[Biology|Biology Team]] Faculty Advisor. His lab works on various synthetic biology projects, including engineering filamentous fungi, laboratory automation using the OpenTrons robot, and building a synthetic cell. He co-founded the BioBricks Foundation, BIOFAB, Gen9, and the international Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) synthetic biology competition.  
+
[[File:Endy photo.jpg|right|thumb|150x200px|Prof. Drew Endy]]
 +
 
 +
Professor Endy is a faculty member in the Stanford Bioengineering Department and the [[Biology|Biology Team]] Faculty Advisor. Prof. Endy is interested in building technology that will facilitate the engineering of living matter as standardized, abstracted, distributable parts. His lab works on various synthetic biology projects, including engineering filamentous fungi, laboratory automation using the OpenTrons robot, and building a synthetic cell. He co-founded the BioBricks Foundation, BIOFAB, Gen9, and the international Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) synthetic biology competition.  
  
 
[[Category:Biology]] [[Category:Faculty Advisors]]
 
[[Category:Biology]] [[Category:Faculty Advisors]]

Latest revision as of 06:07, 8 September 2017

Prof. Drew Endy

Professor Endy is a faculty member in the Stanford Bioengineering Department and the Biology Team Faculty Advisor. Prof. Endy is interested in building technology that will facilitate the engineering of living matter as standardized, abstracted, distributable parts. His lab works on various synthetic biology projects, including engineering filamentous fungi, laboratory automation using the OpenTrons robot, and building a synthetic cell. He co-founded the BioBricks Foundation, BIOFAB, Gen9, and the international Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) synthetic biology competition.