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    <b>Dr. George Wadhams</b><br />
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    <i>Oxford Department of Biochemistry</i><br />
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    Dr. George Wadhams' research interests lie in how bacteria sense and integrate environmental information. His group foocuses on understanding in a quantitative manner how multiple, homologous pathways operate in individual cells and how the components of these pathways can be used to create synthetic pathways.
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    <b>Dr. Nicolas Delalez</b><br />
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    <i>Oxford Department of Engineering</i><br />
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    Dr. George Wadhams' research interests lie in how bacteria sense and integrate environmental information. His group foocuses on understanding in a quantitative manner how multiple, homologous pathways operate in individual cells and how the components of these pathways can be used to create synthetic pathways.
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Revision as of 10:20, 17 August 2017


MEET THE TEAM
Alissa Hummer
Angela Hellyer
Arthur Norman
Chun Ngai Au
Helen Siyu Ren
Jei Diwakar
John Myers
Kushal Mansatta
Noah Sprent
Sumaera Rathore
Zoë Catchpole
Zoe Ford
-- Supervisors --
Dr. George Wadhams
Oxford Department of Biochemistry
Dr. George Wadhams' research interests lie in how bacteria sense and integrate environmental information. His group foocuses on understanding in a quantitative manner how multiple, homologous pathways operate in individual cells and how the components of these pathways can be used to create synthetic pathways.