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- 2011-9-16
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Prof. Yun Wang from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Northwestern University is seeking for Ph.D. candidates to conduct research in her lab as exchange students under the joint-training programs sponsored by China Scholarship Council (CSC). Students with educational background in Environmental Chemistry, Microbiology, Molecular Biology, or related majors are encouraged to apply. Successful candidates must have research experience/interests compatible with those of Prof. Wang’s as outlined below.
Prof. Wang’s research interests lie at the interface of medical/ environmental microbiology and aqueous geochemistry. Her lab applies an interdisciplinary approach to studying how redox-active (bio)molecules react with environmental constituents and act on the physiology of microbial communities. The ultimate goal is to better predict the chemical and biological impact of bioactive molecules in natural aqueous environments, as well as highlight strategies for manipulating clinical and environmental biofilms. Current research projects include: (1) Investigating the roles of redox-active toxins to bacterial pathogen biofilm development and the associated pathogenesis in the context of infections. We propose that phenazine “antibiotics” maybe less weapons for killing than being essential cogs for their producer’s own metabolism by facilitating electron transfer. (2) Examining fungal-bacterial interspecies crosstalk via redox-active secondary metabolites. This is a new direction comes out naturally from the first one to go beyond phenazines and across diverse biological systems. Pathogenic Aspergillus fungi and Pseudomonas bacteria are both famous for producing redox-active toxins. They often coexist in many disease and natural environments. We are interested in understanding whether redox- active “toxins” produced by one organism can benefit the interspecies community as a whole in response to environmental cues. (3) Exploring fungal macromolecules as facilitators of carbon sequestration and electron transfer, aiming in understanding their roles in global climate change, and potential applications in designing novel conductive materials. (4) Engineering bacteria-proof textured steel alloys for medical applications; (5) Determining the fate and transformation of (bio)molecules and environmental pollutants at mineral-water interfaces. (6) Developing imaging techniques for studying (bio)molecules and organic pollutants in vivo and in situ.
Prof. Wang obtained her PhD degree in Aquatic Chemistry from the Johns Hopkins University in 2006. She then did a postdoc in Molecular Geobiology at MIT/HHMI & Caltech/HHMI, prior to joining Northwestern University as an assistant professor in 2009.
Interested candidates should submit an application letter describing qualifications and research interests/objectives, a full CV, and contact information of three references in a single PDF file to Yun Wang’s email address yun-wang@northwestern.edu. |
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