Professor J. Christopher Anderson
J. Christopher
Anderson, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Bioengineering at UC
Berkeley.
His research is focused on developing the foundational
technologies and
applications for synthetic biology, with an emphasis on advanced DNA
assembly, computer-aided manufacture, and therapeutic
organisms.
With broad research interests in applications and foundational
technologies for synthetic biology, his Anderson lab works on both
wetlab and computational projects. Chris has been the faculty advisor
for the Berkeley iGEM program for the past 5 years including
Clotho’s
winning 2008 and 2009 teams. He became an active programmer and
project manager for Clotho beginning in 2010.
Chris coauthored
An Expanded Eukaryotic Genetic Code,
Adding Amino Acids with Novel Reactivity to the Genetic Code of
Saccharomyces Cerevisiae,
Environmentally Controlled Invasion of Cancer
Cells by Engineered Bacteria,
Generation of a Bacterium with a 21 Amino Acid Genetic
Code,
An Expanded Genetic Code with a Functional Quadruplet Codon,
Environmental Signal Integration by a Modular AND Gate,
Gene Synthesis Demystified, and
An archaebacteria-derived glutamyl-tRNA synthetase and tRNA pair for
unnatural amino acid mutagenesis of proteins in Escherichia
coli.
Chris joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 2007 after earning his Ph.D from
the
Scripps Research Institute and completing postdoctoral work at UC
Berkeley. His work was recognized by Technology Review with the
TR35 Award in 2007 and by Synthetic Biology 2.0 with its Best
Application
Award in 2006.
Watch
Synthetic Biology: Treating Cancer with E. Coli — 1 of
2 and
Synthetic Biology: Treating Cancer with E. Coli — 2 of
2.
Read
Scientists honored for scientific and technological
innovation.
Read his
LinkedIn profile and his
OpenWetWare profile.