D-BSSE News
All stories by Carolin Arndt Foppa
Tanja Stadler elected member of the Leopoldina
External
Great honour for Tanja Stadler, Head of the Computational Evolution group: on 17 April, she officially received the membership certificate from Leopoldina, the German National Academy of Sciences. Leopoldina unites researchers with outstanding expertise in their respective fields, currently counting around 1'600 Academy members, being elected for their outstanding scientific achievements. Congratulations, Tanja!
Antimicrobial resistance may evolve more rapidly than previously thought
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As antimicrobial resistance increases globally, infections with resistant bacteria pose a major public health threat. In a new study in Nature Catalysis, a team of researchers led by Adrian Bunzel from the Bioprocess Laboratory at D-BSSE and Christopher Frohlich from the Arctic University of Norway revealed a novel mechanism for how resistances can emerge alarmingly fast. The discovery may help create antibiotics that are less prone to resistance and guide personalized health care.
Farewell to faculty member Yaakov (Kobi) Benenson
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Yaakov Benenson, Professor of Synthetic Biology, leaves the D-BSSE at the end of March to become a full-time entrepreneur at a biotech startup.
GLOBE magazine turns the spotlight on D-BSSE
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The latest issue of the GLOBE magazine of ETH Zurich has a focus on the D-BSSE and its connections and cooperations with institutions in Basel and beyond. Featuring numerous examples of cutting-edge research, the magazine reveals the department’s unique strengths in combining life sciences and data-driven engineering to target key medical challenges. A truly inspiring read!
Embarking on the ETH Net Zero expedition
What will it feel like to research, teach, study and work at a climate- neutral ETH Zurich? With the launch of the "ETH net zero" programme, all ETH members are on a major expedition together towards an ambitious goal. The message: "All for zero 2030".
The new RESPECT programme
“Respect - Reflect - Respond”: Starting on 18 march, this slogan has been rolled out across all places at ETH Zurich. It is part of the new RESPECT programme aimed at all members of the university community. These three words summarise how we should treat each other at ETH Zurich: on equal terms, willing to reflect on our own thoughts and actions, and responding appropriately in a variety of contexts. Find various resources including the updated Code of Conduct and the event agenda online!
Seminar “Bench meets Bedside”
External
On 18 April, 3-5pm, the next ‘Bench meets Bedside’ seminar of the Engineering Translational Medicine initiative will take place at the new D-BSSE building. Consult the website for the programme and the registration link (closing on 15 April).
Full house at Personalised Health Conference
- ETM
- External
Today, we are hosting the Personalised Health Conference with an excellent lineup of keynote speakers: Adrian Egli, Director of the UZH-Institute of Medical Microbiology, Emma Slack, ETH-Professor for Mucosal Immunology, and Jacques Fellay, EPFL-Professor of Genomics and Precision Medicine. Scientists from the D-BSSE and the EU-funded network Machine Learning Frontiers in Precision Medicine also share their latest findings and perspectives on translational research and personalised health.
Niko Beerenwinkel now distinguished fellow of ISCB
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The International Society for Computational Biology ISCB welcomes Niko Beerenwinkel, head of the Computational Biology Group, in its 2024 class of fellows. Honouring distinguished scientists who advanced the frontiers of computational biology and bioinformatics, the jury highlighted Niko’s groundbreaking contributions to cancer research and viral genomics. Congratulations, Niko!
Ride a PubliBike!
Internal
We are happy to announce that the successful partnership of ETH Zurich with PubliBike from Zurich will now be extended to Basel. Staff and students of the Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering can rent the Velospot bikes or e-bikes in Basel-Stadt free of charge for the first 15 minutes (each ride) for a period of 100 days from purchase.
D-BSSE spinoff BioVersys teams up with GSK and successfully reaches clinical milestone
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Developing novel antibacterial products for life-threatening infections, BioVersys announced on 5 March that in partnership with the pharma and biotech company GSK they have successfully completed the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI2) funded programme and reached a key milestone of delivering a Phase 2-ready tuberculosis clinical candidate. The funding scheme is an EU public private partnership programme.
Studying the mechanosensitivity of neurons at nano-scale
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Right from the early developmental stages to fully grown adults, brain cells continuously rely on mechanical cues to migrate to the correct locations in the body, form connections with other neurons or other cell types and communicate with them in a unique language of electrical impulses. In a new study, researchers from the Biophysics group of Daniel Müller and the Bio Engineering Lab of Andreas Hierlemann reveal how neurons sense the magnitude and temporal features of physical forces.
Understanding the pathology of neurodegenerative diseases
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Neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar dementia (FTLD) are difficult to study in vivo. A study led by the University of Zurich in collaboration with the Lab of Andreas Hierlemann, now identifies potential targets that may cause these diseases and their progression. The scientists developed a novel human-derived in vitro cell-culture model and methods for testing that the cells are functional, paving the way for new therapies.
2023 in Review
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Last year was a very exciting year for the D-BSSE: we moved into our new building on campus Schällemätteli in Basel, celebrated many awards, prizes and scientific highlights, launched major partnerships such as the Next-gen Bioengineers programmes with Roche and the Engineering Translational Medicine initiative - and hosted a fantastic welcome retreat. See what was going on at D-BSSE in 2023!
Personalised Health Conference on 13-14 March at D-BSSE
- ETM
- External
In mid-March, the Personalised Health Conference will take place at D-BSSE. The programme includes two exciting days with keynote talks by Adrian Egli, Emma Slack and Jacques Fellay. On the second day the focus lies on translation, entrepreneurship and commercialisation. Registration is free of charge and ends on 10 March.
SNF Spark grant for postdoctoral researcher Asli Azizoglu
Internal
G-Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCR) are cell-surface receptors that detect molecules outside the cell and activate cellular responses. They regulate a large variety of pathophysiological processes and are therefore the target of extensive drug discovery efforts. In her Spark-funded project from the Swiss National Science Foundation, Asli Azizoglu from the Computational Systems Biology group will develop a technology platform that identifies very efficiently functional drugs that target GPCRs.
Welcoming new leadership at D-BSSE
External
As of 1 February 2024, a new leadership runs D-BSSE: Head of Department is Sven Panke, his Deputy is Tanja Stadler. Petra Dittrich continues in her role as Director of Studies. Big thanks go to the outgoing Department Head Daniel Müller, who led the D-BSSE for the past 3 years.
Novel intestine-on-chip system
External
The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease is complex and not fully understood. A novel intestine-on-chip microfluidic system, developed by the Bio Engineering Laboratory of Andreas Hierlemann now enables to study in detail the physiological processes during inflammation. The system helps to elucidate the role of different immune cell types in intestinal inflammation and their specific responses to anti-inflammatory drugs and provides valuable insights for developing therapeutic strategies.
NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering offers grants for its art-science exchange programme
Internal
Launching in March 2024, the NCCR MSE is inviting Phd students and postdoctoral researchers to apply for the new art-science exchange programme: “Brigding Horizons - Art and Science’s Creative Collision”.
Great public interest in Open-Lab tour
External
On 12 December, Petra Dittrich and her group invited the public to learn about microchips and their great use for medical and diagnostic applications or for biological analyses. After a short introduction on the principles of ‘lab-on-a-chip’ technologies, the visitors to the fully booked tour saw some of the labs from inside and had the opportunity to discuss open questions with the young scientists.
Big congrats to the herHack winners Bethany and Marina
Internal
Bethany Allen and Marina Nikolova, two postdoctoral researchers at D-BSSE, and their team members won the first place at herHack, Switzerland’s largest hackathon for women. Competing with 31 teams, their project involved developing a concept to help Migros, the Swiss retail company, provide customers with sustainability data on their grocery shopping. The jury liked best that the team chose to adapt an existing app, which meant that the solution was more sustainable than other teams’ proposals.
Welcome to our new faculty member Basile Wicky
External
Upon application of the President of ETH Zürich, the ETH Board appointed Basile Wicky, currently Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle, USA, as Tenure Track Assistant Professor of Biomolecular Design at D-BSSE, starting this position in June 2024. Basile’s research focuses on computational protein design and synthetic biology for programming biomolecular and cellular systems.
New method to understand cell-cell communications
External
By communicating with one another, cells collectively drive biological functions. The direct neighbourhood of a cell influences its behaviour, gene expression and the cellular crosstalk. The development of diseases is often the consequence of disrupted cell-cell communications. In a study published by Nature Communications, researchers from the Systems Physiology lab of Andreas Moor, developed a method to characterise microenvironments at single-cell resolution.
All-department event: Welcome HOME Day
Internal
On 28 November, the D-BSSE celebrated the successful moving into its new home BSS on campus Schällemätteli with a full-day retreat and party. Some 200 members started the day with Lightening Talks presented by research, administrative and technical groups. On the second half of the day, workshops on a large variety of topics were held, followed by a rally across the building. At the closing ceremony, the department head acknowledged the extraordinary efforts of every single D-BSSE member.
SNF spark grants for unconventional research ideas
Internal
Two senior scientists receive rapid funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation for their novel and unconventional research ideas: Davide Eletto and Yingjun Liu. Their projects were selected for SNF spark grants in a double-blind reviewing process. Congratulations!
ETH Public Tour: Open doors at the Bioanalytics Laboratory
External
On 12 December, at 6:15 PM, the public is invited to learn about microchips and their great use for medical and diagnostic applications or for biological analyses. After a short introduction by Professor Petra Dittrich you will go into the labs and discuss with young scientists their research and experimental set ups. Please register for this tour (in German)!
Andreas awarded the Golden Owl in recognition of his excellent teaching
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The ETH Golden Owl honours lecturers distinguished by exceptional teaching and motivates them to continue with their excellent teaching. The Owl is warded by ETH Zurich’s student association. This year, the Owl was awarded to Andreas Moor, Professor of Systems Physiology at D-BSSE. Congratulations!
“A long list of services and infrastructure are up and running”
Internal
Moving a whole department to a new location requires extraordinary efforts in careful preparation and planning, and ongoing flexibility and response during execution. And it requires dedicated and forward-looking people who manage this demanding process. Interview with Niels Bürckert, Head of Facility Services for Science and Teaching (FaST) – and manager of the largest moving the D-BSSE has ever seen.
D-BSSE spinoff Memo Therapeutics secures funding to speed up clinical development of therapeutic antibodies for renal transplant patients
External
Memo Therapeutics, a late-stage biotech company specialised in the development of therapeutic antibodies, has announced the successful closure of a CHF 25 million Series C financing round. The raised capital will be instrumental to complete the Phase 2 clinical development of the antibody AntiBKV, designed to combat BK polyomavirus infections in kidney transplant recipients. Founded in 2012, Memo Therapeutics originated from the Bioprocess lab of Sven Panke.
Kickoff of Basel collaborative research hub: Engineering Translational Medicine
- ETM
- External
On 25 October, researchers from the D-BSSE, the University of Basel, the University Hospital and the University Children’s Hospital Basel met at the new ETH-building on Schällemätteli campus to mark the kickoff of a joint seminar series dedicated to translational projects and clinical applications. Spearheading the roll-out of the Engineering Translational Medicine research hub, this first event brought together experts from bench and bedside to spark innovative approaches and collaborations.
“I felt very honoured, but I could not give up on all this”
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Daniel Müller, Head of the Biophysics group, was offered the prestigious Humboldt professorship. Learn about his motivation to decline this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and the many reasons why it was a clear decision for him to stay at the D-BSSE and ETH Zurich.
EMBO fellowships enable deep research into brain organoids
Internal
Jasper Janssens and Marius Lange, postdoctoral researchers in the Quantitative Developmental Biology group led by Barbara Treutlein, will use organoids to study regulatory mechanisms of the brain throughout evolution and human development. Congratulations, Jasper and Marius, on receiving the EMBO fellowships for advancing brain research!
Award honours Sven Panke for his efforts in promoting entrepreneurship
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With the Dandelion Award, the ETH AI Center, ETH Entrepreneurship, the ETH Entrepreneur Club and Talent Kick recognise faculty members who are most entrepreneurial-friendly at ETH departments. Nominated by ETH students, PhDs and Post-Docs, Sven Panke receives the prize in 2023 at the D-BSSE. Well deserved: since 2011, the spinoff companies FGen, Memo Therapeutics, Omne Possibile, and Myria Biosciences originated from his Bioprocess lab. Congratulations, Sven!
Improving the environmental footprint of the textile industry: Bio-indigo for eco-conscious blue jeans
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Only indigo gives denim its distinct blue colour. The dye is globally produced in quantities of up to 80,000 tonnes per year. However, its chemical production relies on fossil fuels, and some of the by-products are extremely toxic. After three years of research, scientists in Sven Panke's Bioprocess Lab have successfully developed a fermentation process for the synthesis of bio-indigo from renewable feedstock. The quality of this dye allows for direct application in industrial fibre staining.
“I have a long-standing interest in conflict work”
Internal
Ombudspersons offer advice to members of ETH Zurich who find themselves in difficult situations. While they cannot issue instructions, they may point out solutions, establish contacts, and initiate processes. Interview with Jonas Nakonz who is ombudsperson at ETH Zurich since fall 2022.
Welcome to our new Master students!
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A warm welcome to our 67 new Master students at D-BSSE in Basel, enrolled in our Biotechnology and Computational Biology & Bioinformatics Master-level programmes. Have a great start!!!
Organoid Atlas: Understanding tissue development and degeneration
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The eye-catching image in the current issue of GLOBE was taken by the group of Quantitative Developmental Biology group of Barbara Treutlein. It shows a thin section of retinal tissue, stained with fluorescent dyes and imaged using fluorescent microscopy. This process was developed to image 3D issue structures cultivated in the lab. A comprehensive atlas now combines all images from organoids to improve our understanding of tissue development and degeneration.
Engineered biosensors seek high-potential microbes for sustainable bioproduction
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Markus Jeschek, Professor of Synthetic Microbiology at the University of Regensburg, Germany, and alumnus of Sven Panke’s Bioprocess lab, receives a prestigious Starting Grant from the European Research Council (ERC). In their project BiosenSAI, Jeschek and his team will build synthetic biosensors which help detect new microbes for the sustainable bioproduction of compounds with valuable properties for the chemical and pharmaceutical industry. Congratulations!
Wei Wei receives the 3Rs Young Investigator Award
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Honouring significant advances in the 3Rs Principle, i.e. replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal experimentation, the Swiss 3R Competence Centre is granting this year’s Young Investigator Award to Wei Wei, PhD candidate in the lab of Andreas Hierlemann. In his studies, Wei is creating a 3D model of the brain’s protective wall, the blood-brain-barrier, allowing him to investigate physiological processes at this wall. Big congrats, Wei!
D-BSSE at the Scientifica in Zurich, 2-3 September 2023
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Switzerland’s largest science festival Scientifica is dedicated to the theme “What holds the world together”. Jointly organised by ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich, D-BSSE is contributing to the exciting programme with four activities including thematic booths, a workshop for teenagers and a science café. Scientifica takes place on 2-3 September in Zurich.
Meet Antonia Perju studying applications of nanomaterials in microfluidic systems
Internal
The Romanian graduated in medical physics, nanosciences and chemistry and moved for her postdoc at D-BSSE into developing microfluidic systems for cancer diagnostics. She fell in love with Basel soon after her arrival and is a keen hiker exploring mountains.
What is a cell type?
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Cell atlases chart the molecular information of cells including its genetic make-up and the molecular changes along the cell’s lifespan. This information deepens our understanding of cell-to-tissue and disease development. In a Science Perspective article, Barbara Treutlein and colleagues at Roche’s Institute of Human Biology now question “What is a cell type?”, and call for future research into charting perturbations which alternate the cell’s molecular phenotype.
Using mutations in cancer and healthy single cells to track evolutionary changes
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Variations in the cellular DNA occur frequently and are passed on to descending cells, thereby tracking the evolutionary history of cell populations. In a study published in Cell Genomics, researchers from the Computational Biology group of Niko Beerenwinkel utilized DNA variations to investigate the evolutionary rates in single cells from healthy and cancer tissues. They found that most cancer cells vary in their evolution rate, and also many healthy tissues show evidence for varying rates.
Basel networking event
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Holding their annual networking event in our new home, on 16 August we were welcoming the councillors of the cantons Basel City and Basellandschaft, their administrations, members of federal bodies, and representatives of academic partners, in total more than 90 guests.
Teaching Excellence Award for Michael Nash
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The University of Basel is presenting this year’s Teaching Excellence Award to Michael Nash, Professor of Molecular Engineering of Synthetic Systems at the Department of Chemistry and the D-BSSE. The jury honoured in particular his “patience, and open, relaxed manner allowing students to approach him on equal footing and giving them the opportunity to share their own thinking processes, helping them to get their heads around the lecture material more quickly”. Congratulations, Michael!
Advanced soft electrophysiological device to capture brain cortex activities
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A team of researchers from Stanford University, CA, USA, together with researchers from the Bio Engineering Lab, led by Andreas Hierlemann, developed a high-density electrode array and connector on an ultra-conformable thin-film substrate, which self-assembles onto silicon microelectrode arrays and enables electrocorticogram recordings of extracellular neuronal activity with several thousand channels at micrometer resolution. The device and system was tested with brains of epilectic mice.
360 degrees views at our new home
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BSS, our new home is awaiting our move-in. Take a 360° look at this pentagon-shaped monument from glas, steel and concrete, imagine lively interactions in the think tanks, run along the lab corridors and virtually jump from the roof-top terrace…! The video is a project realised by film producer Gabriela D’Hondt from ETH Multimedia Services who tested the new 360° camera in our building - big thanks!
How evolution in genotype networks drives biological function
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In a new study in Nature Communications, researchers around Joerg Stelling from the Computational Systems Biology group and Yolanda Schaerli, University of Lausanne, shed light on the link between the genetic makeup (genotype) and the behaviour (phenotype) of gene regulatory networks. Using experimental synthetic biology and approx. 4 million mathematical models, they demonstrate large genotype networks, i.e., connected genotypes with the same phenotype, that can facilitate evolution.
PhD Days 2023
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On 8 and 9 June, some 50 doctoral students from D-BSSE celebrated their housewarming at BSS with an exciting programme around science communication, career development, mentorship and supervision at ETH Zurich, and plenty of social and networking events. A highlight was the so called Night Science workshop on the creative side of the scientific process.
Passionate about teaching
Internal
University teaching requires knowledge and knowhow and many more competences to meet the high quality standards and the students needs. Having received the Golden Owl for excellence in teaching in 2022, Roman Vetter in this interview shares his tipps, tricks and vision for teaching.
Meet Marius Lange developing computational models for organoid systems
Internal
The German computational biologist joined the Quantitative Developmental lab of Barbara Treutlein to develop models of dynamic biological processes in organoids. Marius gladly found his expectations met by the interdisciplinary, international lab and great experimental facilities. Being a passionate outdoor person, he is looking forward to the summer season to explore water sports on the Rhine and hiking in the Basel area.
New insights into developmental precision
External
Signaling molecules called morphogens guide the formation of patterns in tissues. Their concentration forms gradients along the tissue to determine cell fate. How this mechanism can be robust towards biological noise and what the role of cell size is in pattern formation has long remained unclear. Using mathematical modelling, Jan Adelmann from the Computational Biology group of Dagmar Iber, shed new light on these two key aspects of developmental biology in his Master’s thesis.
Congratulations to our 2022 graduates!
External
On 26 May, the Graduation Ceremony was held as the very first event in our new home in Basel. 22 Biotechnology and 18 Computational Biology & Bioinformatics graduates attended the celebration together with their family and friends, in total some 170 guests, enjoying the sneak peek into the new building and filling the atrium with their laughters and smiles. Huge congrats to our graduates and best of success for a bright future!
Meet María Pascual García studying stem-cell models of psychiatric disorders
Internal
Moving from mouse studies to stem-cell research, the Spanish postdoc will focus on the electrophysiological mechanisms of autism-spectrum disorders at the Bio Engineering Lab of Andreas Hierlemann. After many years in the field of neuroscience in the Netherlands, María moved to Switzerland to gain more experience in the field of electrophysiology and discover the Helvetic country.
ETH Medals for excellent research: pathogens in public health | bacterial growth platform
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Sarah Nadeau from Tanja Stadler’s group and Joaquin Gutierrez from the lab of Mustafa Khammash receive the ETH medal for their excellent doctoral theses on advancing pathogen phylogenies for public health and developing a fully automated platform for co-culturing bacterial communities, respectively. Big congrats!
Facility Services’ report: Stunning insights into our new building
Internal
The ETH Facility Services department and its team located at D-BSSE provide an exciting glimpse at our new home in Basel. Their report not only guides members of the D-BSSE community through the technical and operational details of BSS but also describes the many services they offer.
SNSF award for Roman Vetter's research video
External
As one of 435 entries submitted to the 2023 SNSF Scientific Image Competition, the video of Roman Vetter was awarded the jury distinction. This stunning videos simulates tissue growth of a malignant tumour growing from a single cell to a million cells. Congratulations, Roman!
Achievements and legacy of the largest SARS-CoV-2 sequencing effort in Switzerland
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Whilst facing extraordinary challenges at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Swiss SARS-CoV-2 sequencing consortium (S3C) was established at D-BSSE. With over 76’000 SARS-CoV-2 genomes sequenced between 2020 and the end of 2022 and made available in open-data archives, the effort led by Tanja Stadler informed science-based decision making – and will facilitate pathogen surveillance in the times to come.
“I sensed a great excitement and openness in our discussions on values”
Internal
rETHink, the organisational development project at ETH Zurich, was launched in 2020. Three years later, on 23 March at the rETHink Switch event, ETH Zurich celebrated the conclusion of interpretation phase and kicked off the next phase that focuses on the implementation of the recommendations, initiatives, improvements. Interview with Roland Baumann, responsible for rETHink communications and core team member of Workstream 6 focussing on cultural development.
INVITATION: Bio(graphy) Apéro
Internal
On 18 April, 5 PM, two D-BSSE alumni will share their inspirational biographies with us and respond to questions on career choices, lessons learned, pitfalls and opportunities you must grasp: Software engineer Oliver Hilsenbeck and principal investigator Sonja Billerbeck. As usual: for D-BSSE community members only!
Finalist for the ETH Spark Award: Sai Reddy’s team presents new cancer therapy with healthy donor T-cells
External
“Enhancing bispecific antibody therapies with healthy donor T-cells”: This groundbreaking work of Systems Immunology Lab head Sai Reddy and his team members Edo Kapetanovic, Rodrigo Vazquez-Lombardi and Cédric Weber had been nominated for the 2022 Spark Award. ETH Zurich gives this award to the most promising inventions that were filed as patents during the previous year. Reddy is a serial entrepreneur at D-BSSE.
Great public interest in Open-Lab tour
Internal
On 21 March, Sven Panke and his group invited the public to learn about bioprocesses and synthetic biology. After a short introduction on the principles of evolution and some of today’s tools applied in bioengineering labs, the visitors to the fully booked tour saw some of the labs from inside and had the opportunity to discuss open questions with the young scientists.
Understanding gene regulation in bacteria to develop new biotechnological solutions
External
D-BSSE researchers shed new light on gene regulation and expression in bacteria. Applying a novel method for high-throughput sequence-function mapping, Simon Höllerer and Markus Jeschek from the Bioprocess lab characterised over 1.2 million mRNA variants in Escherichia coli. Their key findings: a common assumption on how gene expression works has been disproved. Additionally, the researchers found experimental evidence for a postulated mechanism in gene expression.
Meet Carolina Nunes working on toxicology and brain models for the safety of patients
Internal
The Portuguese biologist gathered lab experiences in other European countries before she moved to Switzerland for a PhD studying the toxicology of brain models. During her postdoctoral research at the Bio Engineering lab of Andreas Hierlemann lab, she is part of a larger consortium to bring her findings closer to the patient. For the upcoming summer season, she will get a ‘Wickelfisch’ and practices dancing Forró for one of the many open-air dance floors in Basel.
"With your application you can demonstrate your scientific maturity and independence"
Internal
Mohamed Mahameed, a postdoctoral researcher in the Biotechnology and Bioengineering group of Martin Fussenegger, did his doctorate at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel. A fellowship from the European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO) then offered him the opportunity to transition from basic research to applied bioengineering. In his project, he investigated how to speed up the insulin secretion of genetically modified cells for diabetes therapies.
ETH Public Tour to the Bioprocess lab
Internal
On 21 March, 6:15 PM, the D-BSSE opens the doors to the labs of the Bioprocess group led by Sven Panke. The group will introduce the public to the topic: How synthetic biology teaches evolution new tricks. Registration is required. Please note that this tour will be held in German.
Improved method for engineering therapeutic and diagnostic proteins on yeast
External
Surface proteins on yeast cells play a key role in biomedical applications. The process involves producing modified proteins on the yeast surface and selecting cells that exhibit favourable behaviour, such as binding to a target molecule. A study in ACS Synthetic Biology led by researchers around Michael Nash now presents a new method that equips yeast cells with specific genes that control the amount of protein produced on the cell surface.
Barbara Treutlein receives renowned Friedrich Miescher Award
- External
- D-BSSE
- Preise
- Awards
- Biotechnology
Barbara Treutlein, Head of the Quantitative Developmental Biology Lab, will be awarded the Friedrich Miescher Award 2023. The prize is Switzerland’s highest distinction for scientists under 40 working in the field of biochemistry.
SARS-CoV-2 genome data analysis points to efficiency of Swiss public health measures in 2020
External
A large-scale study led by researchers from the group of Tanja Stadler shows the extent to which measures taken at the start of the pandemic in 2020 slowed the spread of the virus in the population. The quantitative analysis used a representative subset of over 11’000 sequenced coronavirus genomes from COVID19 patients in Switzerland and compared viral introductions to Switzerland at the point of border closures and beyond with a scenario where certain public health measures were absent.
D-BSSE highlights from 2022
External
Review of a busy year full of highlights from the ETH-Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering. See what was going on at D-BSSE in 2022!
Advanced drug-testing platform for leukaemia
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Although survival rates of pediatric leukaemia patients have increased over the past decades, there is still a demand for effective and tailored treatments of certain types of leukaemia in high-risk patients. A new microphysiological drug-testing platform developed by Furkan Gökce and colleagues from the Hierlemann lab now enables the controlled interaction of potential drug candidates with cancer cells, human bone marrow cells and liver micro tissues within the same microfluidic system.
Meet Joanna Hård studying tissue regeneration in humans
Internal
Using single-cell sequencing and spatial transcriptomics, the Swedish postdoctoral stem cell scientist in the Beerenwinkel group is developing a computational method for cell lineage and gene expression analysis in humans to further our understanding of cell and tissue regeneration. Joanna likes the Rhine River and skiing in the alps.
Series C investment for D-BSSE-spinoff BioVersys enables Phase 2 clinical trials
External
BioVersys, a 2010-founded privately owned Swiss pharmaceutical company originating from the Biotechnology lab of Martin Fussenegger, extends its Series C investment round to CHF 32.6 million, which will be used to support the clinical development of BV100, a potential breakthrough hospital antibiotic targeting the most drug-resistant bacterial pathogen,Acinetobacter baumannii, which will soon be tested for the first time in a Phase 2 clinical trial.
The department by the Rhine: D-BSSE featured in Polykum
Internal
The ETH student magazine Polykum dedicated one page to a feature on D-BSSE - thanks to the new VMB comms representative Anika John. Great to see this spotlight on our department in Basel!
New insights on eosinophils fill gaps in single cell atlases
External
Eosinophils are a type of white blood cells involved in the control of intestinal inflammation. Yet, eosinophils have been difficult to study and so far have remained invisible to single-cell transcriptomics, a tool used to construct tissue atlases in health and disease. A Nature study co-led by Costanza Borrelli from the Moor lab and colleagues at the University of Zurich, now provides novel insights into the biology of this cell type.
Best wishes for the festive season and the year 2023!
External
D-BSSE wishes all members and friends Merry Christmas and a very Happy and Peaceful Year 2023! At the Townhall on 31 January, 11 AM, we will review the year 2022 and look into the future, putting a spotlight on the new D-BSSE leadership, the finalisation of our new building BSS and updates from our many initiatives. Until then: stay safe and all the best!
Ethics in Engineering Life conference urges continuation of dialogue
External
The speakers at the Ethics of Engineering Life Conference held in September 2022 in Rome agreed on a pronouncement which calls for a continuation of the fruitful dialogue among different disciplines and relevant stakeholders, saying: “In a world in which engineering life is rapidly improving, and new challenges arise in its application, a common effort to disentangle the moral issues would imply universal benefits in terms of ethical admissibility and allow to find the right path forward”.
D-BSSE science artworks help students in needs
External
Three research images produced by D-BSSE scientists that had turned into artwork were first exhibited and then sold at an auction at Kunsthalle Zürich to support needs-based scholarships for ETH students. The event was organised by the company headcount in collaboration with the ETH AI Centre and ETH Foundation.
Providing a springboard to independence
External
A postdoctoral researcher starting his own group, a pioneer in academic-industry collaboration, and a startup entrepreneur: they all share the vision of finding their personal career paths. Interviews with three members of the Bioprocess group led by Sven Panke on their career goals, personal interests and their needs to become independent.
Lab members learn from alumni and industry partners
External
Networking and mentoring clearly represent the most important door-openers in young scientists’ careers. The group around Andreas Hierlemann entertains a bi-annual reunion of current lab members with lab alumni, international guests and previous lab members, who have become entrepreneurs. At their latest meeting on 19 November, some 85 scientists gathered and discussed ‘Emerging Topics in Science’ at D-BSSE premises.
Covid-19: Confederation and cantons intend to continue working closely with science
External
In order to support the cantons and the Confederation with scientific expertise even after the dissolution of the Swiss National Covid-19 Science Task Force, a new scientific advisory body for the Covid-19 pandemic will be established. The advisory body is chaired by Tanja Stadler, ETH-professor at D-BSSE, and comprises 14 members from different institutions and disciplines. The mandate runs provisionally until the end of June 2023.
Andreas Moor elected EMBO Young Investigator
External
Congratulations to Andreas Moor, head of the Systems Physiology Lab at D-BSSE, on being elected member of the Young Investigator Programme of the European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO). The growing EMBO network promotes excellence in life sciences and shapes their direction in research, fosters the careers of young scientists and strengthens the research communities in Europe and beyond.
Exceptional teaching award 2022
External
The Golden Owl honours lecturers distinguished by exceptional teaching and motivates them to continue with their excellent teaching. The Owl is awarded by ETH Zurich’s student association. This year, the Owl was awarded to Roman Vetter at D-BSSE, Lecturer and Senior Research Associate in the Computational Biology lab. Congratulations, Roman!
INVITATION: Bio(graphy) Lunch
Internal
On 30 November, 12 AM, two invited guests will share their inspirational biographies with us and respond to questions on career choices, lessons learned, pitfalls and opportunities you must grasp: Principal investigator Timm Schroeder and Juliane Klatt, postdoc, UN alumna, and almost-astronaut. Bring your lunch, dessert is provided. As usual: this event is for D-BSSE community members only!
Enhancing T cell immunotherapies with synthetic signalling receptors
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Cellular immunotherapies against cancer have made great progress in recent years using engineered T-cells with synthetic protein receptors called chimeric antigen receptors (CARs). Researchers from Sai Reddy’s lab and colleagues at the University Hospital Basel now present a technology platform to speed up the discovery of CAR variants with enhanced tumour killing properties and use the genetic construction plan for engineering next-generation CAR T cells.
Computational tool: From single cells to tissues and whole organisms
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Organisms and tissues develop through rounds of cell division, differentiation and death. Sophie Seidel and Tanja Stadler from the Computational Evolution group devised a new computational tool that quantifies these developmental processes from genetic footprints in single cells. Their work may contribute to a deeper understanding of development of model organisms and tissues, which in turn, can advance our insights into human development.
Universal structures for maximally robust biomolecular networks
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To preserve their internal states, living systems often need to fully adapt to disturbances from their environment. This robust perfect adaptation (RPA) is ubiquitous in biology. In PNAS, Ankit Gupta and Mustafa Khammash from the Control Theory and Systems Biology lab characterise the universal internal network structures that control maximal RPA. Understanding these mechanisms is essential for a deeper understanding of biological regulation and for designing novel synthetic regulatory circuits.
Swiss public health measures associated with reduced SARS-CoV-2 transmission
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In a new study in Science Translational Medicine, members of Tanja Stadler's group analysed thousands of SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences to reconstruct likely paths of viral transmission into and within Switzerland. Their results show that changes in transmission patterns can be associated with major public health measures. This large-scale analysis was enabled by a national genome sequencing effort initiated by Tanja's group as well as efforts from a broad collaboration of Swiss COVID researchers.
INVITATION: Bio(graphy) Apéro - POSTPONED !
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On 16 November, 5 PM, two D-BSSE alumni will share their inspirational biographies with us and respond to questions on career choices, lessons learned, pitfalls and opportunities you must grasp: Software engineer Oliver Hilsenbeck and principal investigator Sonja Billerbeck. As usual: for D-BSSE community members only!
Florian Schmidt receives excellence award for doctoral thesis
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Florian Schmidt, postdoctoral fellow in the Biological Engineering lab of Randall Platt, is awarded the Rainer-Rudolph Prize 2022 for his doctoral research on “Transcriptional recording by CRISPR spacer acquisition from RNA”, a non-invasive technology for transcriptional recording to understand biological processes in health and disease. In June, Florian's work was also honoured with the ETH medal 2022 for outstanding doctoral theses.
Award honours Andreas Hierlemann for his efforts in promoting entrepreneurship
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With the Dandelion Entrepreneurship Award, the ETH Entrepreneur Club and ETH AI Center recognise faculty members who “encourage talented people to take a leap into the market”. Nominated by ETH students, PhDs and Post- Docs, Andreas Hierlemann receives the prize in 2022 in the D-BSSE. Well deserved: since 2008, the spinoff companies Zurich Instruments, InSphero, Shift Cryptosecurity, Validity Labs, and Maxwell Biosystems originated from his Bio Engineering lab. Congratulations, Andreas!
Public Tour to the Bioprocess lab
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On 22 November, the Bioprocess lab is opening its doors, introducing the public to the great potentials of synthetic biology. This one-hour lab visit will be held in German, registration is required!
“We are in the process of building a Micro-and-Nano-Technology Hub here in Basel”
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The Cleanroom is one of the core scientific facilities at D-BSSE. Once the Cleanroom has moved into BSS, the department’s new home, its size will have tripled, providing large-enough spaces and instruments to users from academic and industrial partners who fabricate devices at micro- and nanometre scales. Interview with Andreas Hierlemann, Liaison person for the Cleanroom Facility.
Last-resort antibiotics prepare E. coli membranes for disruption
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Polymyxins are considered last-resort antibiotics which are still effective against multi-drug resistant pathogens. In a study published by Nature Communications, Selen Manioglu and colleagues from the Biophysics group and the Biozentrum, University of Basel, now describe their mechanistic effect at the molecular level. Using atomic force microscopy imaging, the results show that Polymyxins bond to membrane lipids and the newly formed crystalline structure weakens the membrane until it bursts.
Meet Yingjun Liu focusing on novel tools for understanding neurodegenerative diseases
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The neurobiologist from PR China dreams of a paradigm shift in neurodegeneration research to speed up technological advances in this discipline. Before he joined the Biological Engineering lab of Randall Platt he spent the past seven years at the University of Zurich working on brain aging and human prion disease. Yingjun is very enthusiastic about both his work and Basel, the ease of living, public transport and the different Swiss German dialects.
Testing drugs for cardiotoxic properties
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Pharmaceutical compounds may have cardiotoxic properties, triggering potentially life-threatening arrhythmias. To investigate the effects of drugs on heart muscle cells derived from human stem cells, researchers around Andreas Hierlemann developed an electrophysiological technique for high-density microelectrode arrays, which enables to record intracellular-like signals. This technique may be routinely used in in vitro platforms for cardiotoxicity screening.
Meet Jingjing Han designing biological sensors
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The Chinese materials engineer worked on supramolecular nanozymes before she joined Martin Fussenegger’s biotechnology lab for a postdoctoral training. She loves Basel’s international flair and vibrant energy – and feels extremely lucky to be now working at D-BSSE.
Engineering T-cell receptors for cancer immunotherapy
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A study published by the Synthetic Immunology group of Sai Reddy presents a novel experimental and computational platform for engineering T-cell receptors. This work was led by Rodrigo Vazquez-Lombardi during his time as a postdoc at D-BSSE and became the foundational technology for the spinoff company Engimmune Therapeutics. Rodrigo has transitioned to the Chief Scientific Officer of Engimmune, which is applying the platform for engineering T cell receptors for cancer immunotherapy.
New method for single-cell tracking uses fingerprints
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Live-cell imaging is the primary tool to study cell growth, inheritance and dynamic processes across generations at single-cell level. Applications such as linking the genotype with a desired phenotype by imaging-based screenings still have a high error rate for separating and tracking individual cells. A new method developed by researchers from the group of Joerg Stelling now introduces the cell region fingerprint tracker based on key parameters drawn from different types of microscopy images.
New D-BSSE startup revolutionises treatment of metabolic diseases
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CreARTO Bioscience, a recently founded ETH startup originating from the Biotechnology lab of Martin Fussenegger, offers a synthetic biology-based platform technology that reprograms stem cells for the treatment of metabolic diseases. The first product will target type 1 diabetes.