News and Events
TU Delft Launches Bionanoscience Initiative
February 1, 2008
(Published by the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at Delft University of Technology)
A new Bionanoscience department will be created at TU Delft.
Bionanoscience concerns research at the meeting point of biology and
nanotechnology meet and is as yet largely unexplored. It is expected to
become one of the key scientific fields of the 21st century. Over the
next decade, TU Delft is set to invest 10 million Euro derived from
strategic assets in the new Bionanoscience department, which will form
part of the university’s successful Kavli Institute of Nanoscience.
Bionanoscience is the discipline where biology and nanoscience meet.
The molecular building blocks of living cells are the focus of
bionanoscience. The nanotechnology toolkit enables the precise
depiction, study and control of biological molecules. This creates new
insights into the fundamental workings of living cells. Furthermore, it
is increasingly possible to use the elements of the cell, to
the extent that – in a new field called synthetic biology – gene
regulation systems, artificial biomolecules and nanoparticles can be
developed and applied within the cells. The incorporation of new
biological building blocks in cells is highly promising for
applications in, for instance, industrial biotechnology and medical
science. The Faculty of Applied Sciences’ new Bionanoscience department
will explore the full spectrum from nanoscience to cell biology to
synthetic biology, and as such will naturally and strategically
complement the activities of the existing Nanoscience and Biotechnology
departments.
Investment in biologically oriented fundamental research and its
potential applications is of great strategic importance to TU Delft.
This research field is new and has a bright future, and the research
into individual cells is at the cutting edge of science and technology.
Cell biology is becoming increasingly an engineering discipline: the
traditional approach of the biologist is rapidly changing into that of
the engineer. This is the motivation behind TU Delft’s strategic
decision to add bionanoscience to its research portfolio and by doing
so enhance its international position and profile.
The new department will work closely with the Nanoscience and
Biotechnology departments and will ultimately be the same size as the
existing departments in the Faculty of Applied Sciences. To this end,
the next few years will see an intensive recruitment drive to attract
about 15 top scientists to the department.
Initial steps have already been taken towards creating structural
European cooperation: the prestigious European Molecular Biology
Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg has indicated its willingness to work
together with TU Delft bionanoscientists. EMBL is a major potential
partner, in particular in view of the EMBL’s expertise in the field of
molecular cell biology. Further discussions on cooperation will be held
with representatives from EMBL during a Kavli-EMBL workshop in Delft on
12 and 13 February.
Press release may be found here.