PhD Studentship in Chemical Biology/Computational Biology, Autumn 2014

Disrupting a pathogen's metabolism without harming the host

Our aim is to use measures of network structure and robustness to assess the 
vulnerability of different species of pathogen to anti-infective drugs which 
target the enzymes essential to the pathogen's metabolism. As well as better 
understanding of interventions which will disrupt a pathogen's metabolism 
without harming the host, this will also give us insight into human and animal 
disease.

This studentship will apply computational systems biology, bioinformatics, and 
network analysis to assess the vulnerability of different species to metabolic 
diseases. You will use data on the interaction between proteins and small 
organic molecules to decipher metabolic networks, where enzyme-catalysed 
reactions link together substrates and products to form pathways and cycles. 
You will work with bioinformatics data to trace to both the variation of 
networks across different species and also the networks' evolution; you will 
apply simulations of metabolism's evolution to work backwards in time and 
suggest plausible evolutionary trajectories. Ultimately, you will develop 
predictions of perturbations that disrupt metabolic networks, and ones that can 
be safely applied. Potential future applications include the use of synthetic 
biology to exquisitely design interventions that will affect the pathogen's 
metabolism without risk to the host or environment.

You will be jointly supervised by Dr John Mitchell (Chemistry) and Dr V Anne 
Smith (Biology). Both groups work in computational systems biology and machine 
learning, with Dr Smith's research concentrating on network analysis and Dr 
Mitchell¹s on enzymes and computational chemistry.  For more information on 
their research please visit:
Dr John Mitchell¹s research pages:
http://chemistry.st-andrews.ac.uk/staff/jbom/group/
Dr V Anne Smith¹s research pages:
http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/vannesmithlab/

The studentship will include a stipend and cover UK and EU tuition fees. 
International applicants will have to obtain fees from a different source.

Informal enquiries to [email protected] are encouraged.

Formal applications should follow to the University following the procedure 
available at:
http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/admissions/pg/apply/research/.

Complete applications must have been received by the University by 25 April 
2014.

---
Dr V Anne Smith
School of Biology
Sir Harold Mitchell Building
University of St Andrews
St Andrews, Fife KY16 9TH
United Kingdom
+44 (0)1334-463368
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/vannesmithlab/
The University of St Andrews is a charity registered in Scotland : No SC013532
_______________________________________________
uai mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/uai

Reply via email to