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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Philip Shapira

Philip Shapira

Verified

Georgia Institute of Technology · Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School of Public Policy

Active 1984–2024

h-index59
Citations11.0k
Papers39449 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Political Science
  • Biology
  • Food science
  • Process engineering
  • Biochemistry
  • Economics
  • Geography
  • Biotechnology
  • Law
  • Business
  • Data science
  • Finance
  • Engineering
  • Waste management
  • Environmental protection
  • Ecology
  • Biochemical engineering
  • Chemistry
  • Natural resource economics
  • Computational biology

Selected publications

  • Bioengineering horizon scan 2020

    eLife · 2020 · 47 citations

    • Political Science
    • Computer Science
    • Data science

    Horizon scanning is intended to identify the opportunities and threats associated with technological, regulatory and social change. In 2017 some of the present authors conducted a horizon scan for bioengineering (Wintle et al., 2017). Here we report the results of a new horizon scan that is based on inputs from a larger and more international group of 38 participants. The final list of 20 issues includes topics spanning from the political (the regulation of genomic data, increased philanthropic funding and malicious uses of neurochemicals) to the environmental (crops for changing climates and agricultural gene drives). The early identification of such issues is relevant to researchers, policy-makers and the wider public.

  • Rapid prototyping of microbial production strains for the biomanufacture of potential materials monomers

    Metabolic Engineering · 2020 · 76 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Biochemical engineering
    • Process engineering

    Bio-based production of industrial chemicals using synthetic biology can provide alternative green routes from renewable resources, allowing for cleaner production processes. To efficiently produce chemicals on-demand through microbial strain engineering, biomanufacturing foundries have developed automated pipelines that are largely compound agnostic in their time to delivery. Here we benchmark the capabilities of a biomanufacturing pipeline to enable rapid prototyping of microbial cell factories for the production of chemically diverse industrially relevant material building blocks. Over 85 days the pipeline was able to produce 17 potential material monomers and key intermediates by combining 160 genetic parts into 115 unique biosynthetic pathways. To explore the scale-up potential of our prototype production strains, we optimized the enantioselective production of mandelic acid and hydroxymandelic acid, achieving gram-scale production in fed-batch fermenters. The high success rate in the rapid design and prototyping of microbially-produced material building blocks reveals the potential role of biofoundries in leading the transition to sustainable materials production.

Frequent coauthors

  • Jan Youtie

    149 shared
  • Abdullah Gök

    59 shared
  • Sanjay Arora

    Red Hat (United States)

    29 shared
  • Maria Karaulova

    Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research

    28 shared
  • Li Tang

    University of Salzburg

    22 shared
  • Alan L. Porter

    Search

    19 shared
  • Bárbara Ribeiro

    University of Manchester

    19 shared
  • Oliver Shackleton

    University of Manchester

    18 shared
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