Institute for Microbiology and Biotechnology

The Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology is dedicated to the study of microorganisms. They represent the numerically largest fraction of living matter on our planet and exhibit great diversity due to their adaptation to a wide variety of habitats.

Our research, which aims at a fundamental understanding of the molecular mechanisms and functions of microbial biochemistry and cell biology, is an important prerequisite for the development of new biotechnological and medical applications. An overview and introduction to our current research projects and topics can be found here1.

Our teaching offer includes modules in the courses of study B.Sc. Biology2 and M.Sc. Microbiology3. For more information on specific courses and our institute colloquium, please see here4.

News

Mar 18 - 20: Event series ‘The gene scissors in Bonn’6
The ‘CRISPR Roadshow’ is visiting us with a multi-faceted program for the general public: lab courses, theatre, lecture evening & workshop - all events are free of charge.
the Caspari lab obtains DFG-funding to explore chloroplast import7
The DFG has granted the Caspari lab funding for the project titled 'Exploring Transit Peptides through Photosynthetic Restoration in Chlamydomonas’. The project seeks to uncover how Information is encoded within transit peptides, N-terminal extensions of proteins destined to the chloroplast. To this end, the project relies on complementing a photosynthetic mutant of the model green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii lacking the genes encoding the small subunit of Rubisco (RbcS). Using modular cloning, a large number of constructs will be generated in which the native transit peptide of RbcS is replaced by different peptide variants, allowing diverse hypothesis about the nature of important peptide elements to be probed. These constructs will then be transformed into the corresponding mutant. Any peptide that enables chloroplast import will lead to complementation of the photosynthetic defect, allowing fast scoring of phenotypes by testing for the restored abilitiy to grow photo-autotrophically.  For this project, we are now accepting applications until the 14.03.2025 to fill a doctoral researcher position. For more details about the position and how to apply, please visit:  https://www.uni-bonn.de/de/universitaet/arbeiten-an-der-uni/stellenangebote/stellenausschreibungen/phd-student-for-the-dfg-funded-project-exploring-transit-peptides-through-photosynthetic-restoration-in-chlamydo-monas 
Microbiology on a large scale8
With the support of the BMBF, Sweethoven Biotech has probably carried out the largest enzymatic synthesis at the University of Bonn and produced a novel, non-glycemic sugar alternative on a 500-liter scale, which is now being prepared for pilot tests with food manufacturers.
Exciting trip to the microbiology lab with RG Scherer9
Last December, Dr. Katharina Scherer and her team welcomed a very special group: 10th grade students interested in biotechnology, accompanied by their teachers Markus Heinen and Karl Komander, from the Siebengebirgsgymnasium in Bad Honnef. 
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