Rebecca Buller, University of Bern, Switzerland
Rebecca Buller is a Professor for Organic Chemistry at the University of Bern. Rebecca studied chemistry at the Westfälische-Wilhelms Universität Münster (D) and the University of California Santa Barbara (US). After completing her PhD with a focus on enzyme engineering at the ETH in Zurich (CH), Rebecca Buller accepted a position as laboratory head at the flavour and fragrance company DSM-Firmenich (CH). From 2015 to 2025, she worked at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences, where she established the Competence Center for Biocatalysis (CCBIO).
Rebecca and her group seek to expand the biocatalytic toolbox by sourcing and engineering enzymes for synthetic applications using chemical knowledge and bioinformatic tools. Their research program has been recognized with multiple awards, including the 2023 Roche Sustainability Award, the EFMC Prize for a Young Chemical Biologist in Academia and the Green & Sustainable Chemistry Award of the Swiss Chemical Society in 2024.
Chaitan Khosla, Stanford University, United States
Chaitan Khosla is a professor in the departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at Stanford University. His research interests lie at the chemistry-biology interface. He served as the founding director of Stanford’s ChEM-H Institute and presently serves as the founding director of its Innovative Medicines Accelerator. Chaitan received his PhD in 1990 at Caltech. After completing postdoctoral studies in genetics at the John Innes Centre in the UK, he joined Stanford University in 1992. He has co-authored over 400 peer-reviewed publications and 75 issued U.S. patents. He is an elected member of the American Academy for Arts and Science, the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. Over the past three decades, he has helped launch four companies based on research advances in his laboratory
Sarah O'Connor, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Germany
Sarah O’Connor received her degrees in chemistry from the University of Chicago (BSc) and MIT (PhD), and performed her post-doctoral work at Harvard Medical School. She was a Professor and Project Leader in Biological Chemistry at the John Innes Centre from 2011 to 2019. She has been the Director of the Department of Natural Product Biosynthesis at the Max Planck Institute of Chemical Ecology since summer 2019. Her research interests focus on plants' natural products, with a particular interest in the iridoids and alkaloids. Her research group takes a broad approach to understand plant biosynthetic pathways, ranging from gene discovery, mechanistic enzymology, and metabolic engineering. She has received the Leibniz Prize (2023), ACS Ernest Guenther Award in Natural Products (2022), ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry Perkin Prize for Organic Chemistry (2019); European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant (2018); Election to European Molecular Biology Organization (2017), Wain Medal (2013).
Mohammad R. Seyedsayamdost, Princeton University, United States
Mohammad R. Seyedsayamdost is Professor of Chemistry and Molecular Biology at Princeton University. He obtained a combined B.S./M.S. degree in Biochemistry from Brandeis University, completing his thesis research with Prof. Liz Hedstrom. He then conducted graduate research under the guidance of Prof. JoAnne Stubbe and received a Ph.D. in chemistry from MIT. After postdoctoral training with Prof. Jon Clardy and Prof. Roberto Kolter at Harvard Medical School, he started his independent career at Princeton. His lab is broadly interested in natural product discovery, function, and biosynthesis, and his research has been recognized by a number of awards, most recently with the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship.
Eriko Takano, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
Eriko Takano is Professor of Synthetic Biology in the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology at the University of Manchester. She is the Program Director for the Singapore Integrative Biosystems and Engineering Research (SIBER) Strategic Research & Translational Thrust (SRTT) Program in A*STAR (since Jan 2025) and a visiting Professor at the Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Japan.
Eriko is internationally recognized as a pioneer in the synthetic biology for antibiotic production and has been working in both industrial and academic research. Eriko’s research interests cover many facets of microbial synthetic biology. She is serving as an expert advisor for national and international bodies, including the OECD, the DSIT, BBSRC Council and various Japanese funding bodies (NEDO, JST, JSPS).
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Jennifer Andexer
Freiburg University, Germany
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Dominic Campopiano
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
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Sotirios Kampranis
University of Copenhagen, Denmark
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Bradley Moore
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, United States
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Tilman Weber
Technical University of Denmark, Denmark