Team:Warsaw/Team/Supervisors
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- | <html><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2009/9/9e/Stepien_fotos_2005_009.jpg" alt="Prof. Piotr Stepien" width=" | + | <html><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2009/9/9e/Stepien_fotos_2005_009.jpg" alt="Prof. Piotr Stepien" width="300" height="196" align="left"></html> |
===Prof. Piotr Stępień=== | ===Prof. Piotr Stępień=== | ||
Revision as of 23:07, 21 July 2009
Instructors and Advisors
prof. dr hab. Jacek Bielecki
Education
MSc, University of Warsaw, 1975 PhD, University of Warsaw, 1981 Associated professor, Warsaw University, 1995 Professor at University of Warsaw, 1996 Vice Dean of Faculty of Biology, 1996 - 1999, and 1999-2002
Scholarships:
- Germany , 1984, University of Tuebingen, 10 months
- Germany, 1985, Max Planck Institute, 8 months
- USA, 1989, University of Pennsylvania post doc, 2,5 years
- USA, 1993, University of Pennsylvania, visiting prof., 3 months
- USA, 1999, University of California, Berkeley, visiting prof., 2 months
Research interests:
Molecular mechanisms of virulence of bacteria Listeria monocytogenes, especially the role of a hemolysin, listeriolysin O (LLO). LLO is a 58 kDa sulphydryl-activated, pore-forming cytotoxin which allows L. monocytogenes to escape from the phagocytic vesicle in macrophage and causes actin cytoskeleton reorganization in infected cells. LLO- mutants are much less virulent and do not survive in macrophages.
Prof. Piotr Stępień
Michał Lower
I come from Warsaw, our capital city :-). I study Biotechnology at University of Warsaw. My M. Sc. thesis in Department of Virology was about new method of rapid determination of type III DNA methyltransferase recognition sequences. Apart from molecular biology I'm passionated with computer programming.
Paweł Krawczyk
I come from small village in the south of Poland but now I’m a student of biotechnology and psychology at the College of Interfaculty Individual Studies in Mathematics and Natural Sciences, University of Warsaw. Scientifically I’m freak on any fluorescent methods connected with protein research. My B. Sc. thesis was mainly about FRET method in context of regulation of the Hsp90 molecular chaperone protein. No I work in the field of neuroscience, especially on the molecular basis of schizophrenia (it doesn’t mean I live in a world of hallucinations). In my free time I love to play football and volleyball and listen to music, especially blues and rock. Last year I've started in iGEM as a student and it was very challenging experience. I hope it will help during this year "synthetic" adventure