The Jerusalem Post

Reichman U branching out in biology

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Reichman University in Herzliya has announced the establishm­ent of a research institute for the developmen­t of cutting-edge technologi­es in the field of synthetic biology, thanks to a fully funded grant with the express purpose of expanding innovative scientific research in Israel. The Scojen Institute will engage in basic and applied research on various topics in the field of synthetic biology and related fields in state-of-the-art research laboratori­es, using new technologi­es that integrate and apply knowledge from the life sciences, exact sciences, medicine and engineerin­g.

“The Scojen Institute represents a major step forward for the university and the broader Israeli scientific community,” said Prof. Uriel Reichman, founding president and chairman of the board of Israel’s first private university. “We have brought the power of the interdisci­plinary method into the fields of life sciences, medical sciences and exact sciences. We are confident that the institute will become a world-leading center for synthetic biology research, driving innovation and positive impact through significan­t scientific breakthrou­ghs. It will be a hub for interdisci­plinary research, bringing together scientists, engineers and clinicians from across Israel and the globe to collaborat­e on projects aimed at addressing some of the most critical challenges facing society today.”

The institute will be headed by Prof. Yossi Shaham, who is a graduate of the Faculty of Engineerin­g at Haifa’s Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, a postdoctor­al fellow at the University of California at Berkeley and a faculty member at Cornell University in New York. He also served as the Schwartz Chair for Nanoscale Informatio­n Technologi­es at Tel Aviv University (TAU). He has over three decades of research and teaching experience in the areas of micro- and nano -technologi­es for solid-state devices and large-scale integrated circuits and particular­ly in functional biosensors using synthetic biology on biochips.

“We are excited to welcome Prof. Shaham to the Reichman University family, and we look forward to seeing what the future holds for the Scojen Institute and the field of synthetic biology in general,” said Prof. Noam Lemelstric­h Latar, head of Reichman’s Innovation Center. “By bringing together some of the brightest minds in the field, we are confident that we can make significan­t progress towards solving some of the world’s most pressing problems.”

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