Dj collins google biography of dr
James J. Collins
American bioengineer
For other people named James Collins, see James Collins (disambiguation).
James Joseph Collins (born June 26, ) is an American biomedical engineer and bioengineer who serves as the Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering & Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he is also a director at the MIT Abdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning in Health.
Collins conducted research exhibiting that artificial intelligence (AI) approaches can be used to find novel antibiotics, such as halicin and abaucin.[1] He serves as the Director of the Antibiotics-AI Project at MIT, which is supported by The Audacious Plan, and is a member of the Harvard–MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology.
He is also a core faculty member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and a member of the Broad Institute.[2]
Collins is one of the founders of the field of synthetic biology, and his work on synthetic gene circuits and programmable cells has led to the development of new classes of diagnostics and therapeutics, which have influenced investigate in detecting and treating infections caused by emerging pathogens such as Ebola, Zika, SARS-CoV-2, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
He is also a researcher in systems biology, having made discoveries regarding the actions of antibiotics and the emergence of antibiotic resistance.[3]
Collins is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Medicine, and the National Academy of Sciences for his contributions to synthetic biology and engineered gene networks.
In , he was awarded a Clarivate Citation for research most likely to receive a Nobel Prize.
Early life and education
Collins was born on June 26, , in The Bronx, then moved to Bellerose, New York.[4] His father was an aviation engineer who worked on projects for NASA and the military.[5] At age 10, Collins moved to New Hampshire with his family after finishing elementary school,[6] growing up in Nashua.[7] He first developed an interest in medical engineering when one of his grandfathers became blind and the other suffered multiple strokes.[5]
Collins originally intended to study electrical engineering as an undergraduate and was accepted to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) but decided instead to be present at the College of the Sacred Cross, finding the atmosphere at the college more friendly.
Collins later recalled, "I fell in love with the place. I wanted to work hard and get a strong education, but I also wanted to relish myself. I wanted to fetch a broad experience, and I felt I could get that at Holy Cross".[3]
At Holy Cross, Collins was a class officer and a member of the track and cross country teams, where he was a miler.[8] He also wrote for the school newspaper and taught as part of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD).
As an undergraduate, he had been awarded a President's Volunteer Service Award and was designated as a Fenwick Scholar in , one of the college's highest honors. Collins graduated from Holy Cross in as class valedictorian, receiving a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in physics, summa cum laude.[3] His undergraduate thesis was titled "Functional Neuromuscular Stimulation: An Assessment of the Biomechanical and Neuromuscular Foundations of Walking".[10]
After graduating from Holy Cross, Collins was one of four students from Modern England to be selected for a Rhodes Scholarship, which he used to study medical engineering in England at Oxford University.[11] At Oxford, he was a member of Balliol College and earned a Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil) in specializing in medical and mechanical engineering.[12] His dissertation was titled "Joint Mechanics: Modelling of the Lower Limb" and was supervised by John J.
O'Connor.[13]
Career
Collins returned to the Joined States to join the faculty of Boston University. There, he established a laboratory and became the university's William F. Warren Distinguished Professor, a University Professor, a professor of biomedical engineering, a professor of medicine, and co-director of the Center for BioDynamics and Director of the Center of Synthetic Biology.
In , Collins was named as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, becoming the first investigator from Boston University.[7]
In , Collins moved to become a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[14] Currently, Collins is the Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering & Science and Professor of Biological Engineering at MIT.
Collins is also a core founding faculty member of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and a member of the Broad Institute. Collins is also faculty direction for life sciences at the MIT Jameel Clinic since [15][16]
Collins has been involved with a number of start-up companies, and his inventions and technologies own been licensed by over 25 biotech and medical device companies.
Collins is the scientific co-founder of several biotech companies and non-profit organizations.
In , Collins was appointed by President Barack Obama to be a member of the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues.[17]
Work
Synthetic biology
Collins' work on synthetic gene circuits launched the field of synthetic biology.[18] He was the first (along with Michael Elowitz and Stanislas Leibler) to exhibit that one can harness the biophysical properties of nucleic acids and proteins to create living circuits, which can be used to rewire and reprogram living cells.
In a paper published in Nature,[19] Collins designed and constructed a genetic toggle switch – a synthetic, bistable gene regulatory network – in E. coli. The toggle switch forms a synthetic, addressable cellular memory unit with broad implications for biophysics, biomedicine and biotechnology.
In the same issue of Innateness, Elowitz and Leibler showed that one can build a artificial genetic oscillator (called the repressilator) in E. coli.[20] Collins’ Character paper on the genetic toggle switch[19] and Elowitz's and Leibler's Nature paper[20] on the repressilator are considered landmark pieces, ones that marks the beginnings of synthetic biology.[18]
Building on this operate, Collins showed that synthetic gene networks can be used as regulatory modules and interfaced with a microbe's genetic circuitry to create programmable cells for a variety applications,[21] e.g., synthetic probiotics to serve as living diagnostics and living therapeutics to notice, treat and prevent infections such as cholera and C.
difficile.[22][23] He also designed and manufactured engineered riboregulators (RNA switches) for sensing and control,[24][25][26][27][28][29] microbial eliminate switches and genetic counters for biocontainment,[30][31][32] synthetic bacteriophage to combat resistant bacterial infections,[33][34] genetic switchboards for metabolic engineering,[35] and tunable genetic switches for gene and cell therapy.[36][37][38] Recently, Collins developed freeze-dried, cell-free synthetic gene circuits, an innovative platform that forms the basis for inexpensive, paper-based diagnostic tests for emerging pathogens (e.g., Zika, Ebola, SARS-CoV-2, antibiotic-resistant bacteria),[39][40][41][42] wearable biosensors,[43] and portable biomolecular manufacturing (e.g., to manufacture vaccine antigens) in the developing world.[44]
In the context of artificial biology and regenerative medicine, Collins collaborated with Derrick Rossi and George Q.
Daley on a study using synthetic mRNA technology for biomedical applications. The team showed that synthetic mRNA could be used for highly effective stem cell reprogramming and redifferentiation. This work was published in Cell Stem Cell in ,[45] and Rossi used this lab-made biology technology platform to establish Moderna.[46]
Collins has also used unreal biology approaches (computational and experimental) to identify and address significant biological physics questions regarding the regulation of gene expression and cell dynamics.
Collins, for example, has utilized synthetic gene networks to study the effects of positive feedback in genetic modules,[47][48] the role and origin of stochastic fluctuations in eukaryotic gene expression,[49] and the phenotypic consequences of gene expression noise and its effects on cell fate and microbial survival strategies in stressful environments.[50] Importantly, Collins has also demonstrated how synthetic gene circuits can be used to test, validate and improve qualitative and quantitative models of gene regulation,[51] and shown that biophysical theory and experiment can be coupled in bottom-up approaches to gain biological insights into the intricate processes of gene regulation.[52]
Antibiotics and antibiotic resistance
Collins is also one of the leading researchers in systems biology through the use of experimental-computational biophysical techniques to reverse engineer and examine endogenous gene regulatory networks.[53] Collins and collaborators showed that reverse-engineered gene networks can be used to identify drug targets, living mediators and disease biomarkers.[54]
Collins and collaborators discovered, using systems biology approaches, that all classes of bactericidal antibiotics induce a usual oxidative damage cellular death pathway.[55] This finding indicates that targeting bacterials systems that remediate oxidative damage, including the SOS DNA damage response, is a viable means of enhancing the effectiveness of all major classes of antibiotics and limiting the emergence of antibiotic resistance.
This labor established a mechanistic relationship between bacterial metabolism and antibiotic efficacy, which was further developed and validated by Collins and his team in a series of follow-on studies.[56]
Collins showed that certain metabolites could be used to enable bactericidal antibiotics to eradicate persistent, tolerant infections.[57] Additionally, Collins and co-workers discovered that sublethal levels of antibiotics activate mutagenesis by stimulating the production of reactive oxygen species, leading to multidrug resistance.[58] Collins and colleagues, using their systems approaches, also discovered a population-based resistance mechanism constituting a form of kin selection whereby a small number of resistant bacterial mutants, in the face of antibiotic accentuate, can, at some cost to themselves, provide protection to other more vulnerable, cells, enhancing the survival capacity of the overall population in stressful environments.[59]
In , Collins was part of the team—with fellow MIT Jameel Clinic faculty lead Professor Regina Barzilay—that announced the discovery through intense learning of halicin, the first new antibiotic compound for 30 years, which kills over 35 powerful bacteria, including antimicrobial-resistanttuberculosis, the superbug C.
difficile, and two of the World Health Organization's top-three most deadly bacteria.[60] In , Collins, Barzilay and the MIT Jameel Clinic were also awarded funding through The Audacious Project to create the Antibiotics-AI Project and expand on the discovery of halicin in using AI to respond to the antibiotic resistance crisis through the development of new classes of antibiotics.[61]
Nonlinear dynamics in biological systems
Collins also pioneered the development and use of nonlinear dynamical approaches to study, mimic and refine biological function,[62] expanding our ability to understand and harness the physics of living systems.
Collins, for example, proposed that input noise could be used to enhance sensory function and motor control in humans.[63][64] He and collaborators showed that touch sensation and balance control in juvenile and older adults, patients with stroke, and patients with diabetic neuropathy could be improved with the application of sub-sensory mechanical noise,[65] e.g., via vibrating insoles.[66] This work has led to the creation of a modern class of medical devices to address complications resulting from diabetic neuropathy, restore brain function obeying stroke, and improve elderly even out.
Awards
Collins' scientific accomplishments have been recognized by numerous awards, including the Dickson Prize in Medicine, the Sanofi-Institut Pasteur Award, the HFSP Nakasone Award, the Max Delbruck Prize, the Gabbay Award, the NIH Director's Pioneer Award, the Ellison Medical Foundation Senior Scholar Award in Aging, the inaugural Anthony J.
Drexel Exceptional Achievement Award, the Lagrange Prize from the CRT Foundation in Italy, the BMES Robert A. Pritzker Award, the Promega Biotechnology Research Award, and being selected for Technology Review's inaugural TR young innovators who will shape the future of technology[67] – and the Scientific American 50 – the top 50 superb leaders in science and technology.[68]
Collins is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the Institute of Physics, and the American Institute for Medical and Physiological Engineering.
In , he received a MacArthur Foundation "Genius Award",[69] becoming the first bioengineer to receive this honor.[70] Collins' award citation noted, "Throughout his study, Collins demonstrates a proclivity for identifying abstract principles that underlie complex biological phenomena and for using these concepts to solve concrete, practical problems.".
He was also honored as a Medical All-Star by the Boston Red Sox, and threw out the first pitch at a Red Sox game in Fenway Park. In , Collins was named an Allen Distinguished Investigator by the Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group.[71] Collins is an elected member of all three U.S.
national academies – the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the National Academy of Medicine. He is also an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, as successfully as a charter fellow of the National Academy of Inventors.
Collins has received teaching awards at Boston University, including the Biomedical Engineering Teacher of the Year Award, the College of Engineering Professor of the Year Award, and the Metcalf Cup and Prize for Excellence in Teaching, which is the extreme teaching honor awarded by Boston University.[72]
In , Collins was named a Clarivate Citation Laureate along with Michael Elowitz and Stanislas Leibler "for pioneering work on synthetic gene circuits, which launched the field of synthetic biology".[73]
Personal life
Collins' wife is Mary McNaughton Collins; they met while undergraduates at Holy Cross and married in She is a professor at Harvard Medical School and a physician at Massachusetts General Hospital.[3] They have two children: Katie, a Marshall Scholar at the University of Cambridge, and Danny, a Knight-Hennessy Scholar at Stanford University.[74][75]
References
- ^Trafton, Anne (December 20, ).
"Using AI, MIT researchers identify a new class of antibiotic candidates". MIT News. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved May 6,
- ^Saunders, Fenella (February 6, ). "Synthesizing Engineering and Biology".
American Scientist. Sigma Xi. Retrieved December 19,
- ^ abcdReardon, Michael (Winter ).
"The Profile: James J. Collins Jr. '87".
A former Google communications chief and the designer behind New York's 'Vessel' structure have founded a new biotech company in the UK. D-J Collins and the designer Thomas Heatherwick established a startup called Early on December 20according to documents filed with Companies House. Both were listed as majority shareholders, per the same documents. Early will point on the early detection of serious illnesses.Holy Cross Magazine. Vol.41, no.1. College of the Holy Cross. p. Archived from the original on August 22, Retrieved April 15,
- ^Khan, Firdos Alam (May 8, ). Biotechnology in Medical Sciences.
CRC Push. ISBN.
- ^ abTrafton, Anne (November 14, ).
MA Kohanski, DJ Dwyer, JJ Collins. Nature Reviews Microbiology 8 (6), , Stochasticity in gene expression: from theories to phenotypes.
"Reprogramming biology: Biological engineer James Collins designs genetic circuits with novel functions". MIT News. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved December 19,
- ^"James Collins, Ph.D. | AIMBE College of Fellows Class of ".
American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering. Retrieved December 19, via Xconomy.
- ^ abBaker, Billy (November 24, ). "Dream gig grants him freedom to explore".
The Boston Globe. p. Retrieved December 20,
- ^Zaman, Muhammed (April 20, ). Biography of Resistance. Harper. ISBN.
- ^"Past Fenwick Scholars, Projects and Advisors".
College of the Holy Cross. Retrieved December 19,
- ^Hopkin, Karen (May 1, ). "Switched on Science". The Scientist Magazine. Retrieved August 17,
- ^"Dickson Prize in Medicine awarded to Balliol alumnus".
Balliol College, Oxford. University of Oxford. October 28, Retrieved September 4,
- ^"Dissertations/Thesis: Joint mechanics - modelling of the lower limb". Oxford Libraries Information System.
University of Oxford. Retrieved December 19,
- ^"Collins honored by Sigma Xi; Marnett steps down as dean". . Retrieved December 20,
- ^"Regina Barzilay, James Collins, and Phil Sharp join leadership of recent effort on machine learning in health".
MIT News. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. October 3, Retrieved November 13,
- ^"People". J-Clinic. Archived from the original on November 30, Retrieved November 13,
- ^"Jim J.
Collins, Ph.D. | Catalio Capital Management". . Retrieved December 19,
[permanent dead link] - ^ abEditorial: Ten years of synergy, Character , (21 January ), doi/b
- ^ abGardner, TS; Cantor CR; Collins JJ (January 20, ).
"Construction of a genetic toggle switch in Escherichia coli". Nature. (): – BibcodeNaturG. doi/ PMID S2CID
- ^ abElowitz MB, Leibler S ().
"A synthetic oscillatory network of transcriptional regulators". Nature. (): –8. BibcodeNaturE.
Ex-Google comms chief D-J Collins has founded a biotech startup with artist Thomas Heatherwick. The startup, named Early, will focus on the early detection of serious illnesses. The pair.
doi/ PMID S2CID
- ^Kobayashi H, Kaern M, Araki M, Chung K, Gardner TS, Cantor CR; etal. (). "Programmable cells: interfacing natural and engineered gene networks". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
(22): –9. BibcodePNASK. doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Mao N, Cubillos-Ruiz A, Cameron DE, Collins JJ (). "Probiotic strains detect and suppress cholera in mice". Sci Transl Med.
10 (). doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Cubillos-Ruiz A, Alcantar MA, Donghia NM, Cárdenas P, Avila-Pacheco J, Collins JJ (). "An engineered live biotherapeutic for the prevention of antibiotic-induced dysbiosis".
Nat Biomed Eng. 6 (7): – doi/s hdl/ PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Isaacs, FJ; Dwyer, DJ; Ding, C; Pervouchine, DD; Cantor, CR; Collins, JJ (). "Engineered riboregulators enable post-transcriptional control of gene expression".
Nat Biotechnol. 22 (7): –4 doi/nbt PMID S2CID
- ^Green AA, Silver PA, Collins JJ, Yin P (). "Toehold switches: de-novo-designed regulators of gene expression". Cell. (4): – doi/ PMC PMID: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ^Green AA, Kim J, Ma D, Silver PA, Collins JJ, Yin P ().
"Complex cellular logic computation using ribocomputing devices". Nature. (): – BibcodeNaturG. doi/nature PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Angenent-Mari NM, Garruss AS, Soenksen LR, Church G, Collins JJ ().
"A profound learning approach to programmable RNA switches". Nat Commun. 11 (1): BibcodeNatCoA. doi/s PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Zhao EM, Mao AS, de Puig H, Zhang K, Tippens ND, Tan X; etal.
(). "RNA-responsive elements for eukaryotic translational control". Nat Biotechnol. 40 (4): – doi/s PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Gayet RV, Ilia K, Razavi S, Tippens ND, Lalwani MA, Zhang K; etal.
(). "Autocatalytic base editing for RNA-responsive translational control". Nat Commun. 14 (1): BibcodeNatCoG.
This profile was gathered from multiple public and government sources. See Who's Searching for You. Sometimes Dj goes by various nicknames including Dj R Collins. Dj has many family members and associates who involve Arthur Redding and Donna Redding.doi/sz. PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Friedland AE, Lu TK, Wang X, Shi D, Church G, Collins JJ (). "Synthetic gene networks that count". Science. (): – BibcodeSciF.
doi/science PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Callura JM, Dwyer DJ, Isaacs FJ, Cantor CR, Collins JJ (). "Tracking, tuning, and terminating microbial physiology using unreal riboregulators".
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (36): – BibcodePNASC. doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Chan CT, Lee JW, Cameron DE, Bashor CJ, Collins JJ ().
"'Deadman' and 'Passcode' microbial kill switches for bacterial containment". Nat Chem Biol. 12 (2): 82–6. doi/nchembio PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Lu TK, Collins JJ ().
"Dispersing biofilms with engineered enzymatic bacteriophage". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (27): – BibcodePNASL. doi/pnas PMC PMID
- ^Lu TK, Collins JJ (). "Engineered bacteriophage targeting gene networks as adjuvants for antibiotic therapy".
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (12): – BibcodePNASL. doi/pnas PMC PMID
- ^Callura JM, Cantor CR, Collins JJ (). "Genetic switchboard for synthetic biology applications". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
(15): –5. BibcodePNASC. doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Deans TL, Cantor CR, Collins JJ (). "A tunable genetic switch based on RNAi and repressor proteins for regulating gene expression in mammalian cells".
Cell. (2): – doi/ PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Cho JH, Collins JJ, Wong WW (). "Universal Chimeric Antigen Receptors for Multiplexed and Logical Control of T Cell Responses".
Cell. (6): –e doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Cho JH, Okuma A, Sofjan K, Lee S, Collins JJ, Wong WW (). "Engineering advanced logic and distributed computing in human CAR immune cells".
Nat Commun. 12 (1): BibcodeNatCoC. doi/s PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Pardee K, Green AA, Ferrante T, Cameron DE, DaleyKeyser A, Yin P; etal. (). "Paper-based artificial gene networks".
Cell. (4): – doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Pardee K, Green AA, Takahashi MK, Braff D, Lambert G, Lee JW; etal. (). "Rapid, Low-Cost Detection of Zika Virus Using Programmable Biomolecular Components".
Cell. (5): – doi/ hdl/ PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^de Puig H, Lee RA, Najjar D, Tan X, Soeknsen LR, Angenent-Mari NM; etal. (). "Minimally instrumented SHERLOCK (miSHERLOCK) for CRISPR-based point-of-care diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 and emerging variants".
Sci Adv. 7 (32).
Collins conducted research showing that artificial intelligence AI approaches can be used to discover novel antibiotics, such as halicin and abaucin. Collins is one of the founders of the field of synthetic biologyand his operate on synthetic gene circuits and programmable cells has led to the development of new classes of diagnostics and therapeutics, which have influenced research in identifying and treating infections caused by emerging pathogens such as Ebola, Zika, SARS-CoV-2, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria. He is also a researcher in systems biologyhaving made discoveries regarding the actions of antibiotics and the emergence of antibiotic resistance. Collins is a member of the National Academy of Engineeringthe National Academy of Medicineand the National Academy of Sciences for his contributions to lab-made biology and engineered gene networks.BibcodeSciAD. doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Karlikow M, da Silva SJR, Guo Y, Cicek S, Krokovsky L, Homme P; etal. (). "Field validation of the production of paper-based tests for the detection of the Zika and chikungunya viruses in serum samples".
Nat Biomed Eng. 6 (3): – doi/s PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Nguyen PQ, Soenksen LR, Donghia NM, Angenent-Mari NM, de Puig H, Huang A; etal. (). "Wearable materials with embedded artificial biology sensors for biomolecule detection".
Nat Biotechnol. 39 (11): – doi/s hdl/ PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Pardee K, Slomovic S, Nguyen PQ, Lee JW, Donghia N, Burrill D; etal. ().
"Portable, On-Demand Biomolecular Manufacturing". Cell. (1): –e doi/ hdl/ PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Warren L, Manos PD, Ahfeldt T, Loh YH, Li H, Lau F; etal. (). "Highly efficient reprogramming to pluripotency and directed differentiation of human cells with synthetic modified mRNA".
Cell Stem Cell. 7 (5): – doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Kutz, Erin (October 4, ). "ModeRNA, Stealth Startup Backed By Flagship, Unveils New Way to Make Stem Cells".
Xconomy, Inc.
- ^Hasty J, Pradines J, Dolnik M, Collins JJ (). "Noise-based switches and amplifiers for gene expression". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 97 (5): – arXiv:physics/ BibcodePNASH.
doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Isaacs FJ, Hasty J, Cantor CR, Collins JJ (). "Prediction and measurement of an autoregulatory genetic module". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (13): –9.
BibcodePNASI. doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Blake WJ, KAErn M, Cantor CR, Collins JJ (). "Noise in eukaryotic gene expression". Nature. (): –7. BibcodeNaturB.
doi/nature PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Blake WJ, Balázsi G, Kohanski MA, Isaacs FJ, Murphy KF, Kuang Y; etal. (). "Phenotypic consequences of promoter-mediated transcriptional noise".
Mol Cell. 24 (6): – doi/ PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Ellis T, Wang X, Collins JJ (). "Diversity-based, model-guided construction of synthetic gene networks with predicted functions".
Nat Biotechnol. 27 (5): – doi/nbt PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Guido NJ, Wang X, Adalsteinsson D, McMillen D, Hasty J, Cantor CR; etal. ().
"A bottom-up approach to gene regulation". Nature. (): – BibcodeNaturG.
The system can't accomplish the operation now. Try again later. Citations per year. Duplicate citations.doi/nature PMID S2CID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Yeung MK, Tegnér J, Collins JJ (). "Reverse engineering gene networks using singular value decomposition and robust regression".
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 99 (9): –8. BibcodePNASY. doi/pnas PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Gardner, TS; di Bernardo D; Lorenz D; Collins JJ (July 4, ). "Inferring genetic networks and naming compound of action via phrase profiling".
Science. (): – doi/science PMID S2CID
- ^Kohanski, MA; Dwyer DJ; Hayete B; Lawrence CA; Collins JJ. (). "A shared mechanism of cellular death induced by bactericidal antibiotics". Cell.
(5): – doi/ PMID S2CID
- ^Kohanski MA, Dwyer DJ, Wierzbowski J, Cottarel G, Collins JJ (). "Mistranslation of membrane proteins and two-component system activation trigger antibiotic-mediated cell death".
Cell. (4): – doi/ PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Allison KR, Brynildsen MP, Collins JJ (). "Metabolite-enabled eradication of bacterial persisters by aminoglycosides".
Nature. (): – BibcodeNaturA. doi/nature PMC PMID
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Kohanski, MA; DePristo MA; Collins JJ. (). "Sublethal antibiotic treatment leads to multidrug resistance via radical-induced mutagenesis".
Molecular Cell. 37 (3): – doi/ PMC PMID
- ^Lee, HH; Molla MN; Cantor CR; Collins JJ. (). "Bacterial charity work leads to population-wide resistance". Nature. (): 82– BibcodeNaturL.
doi/nature PMC PMID
- ^Stokes, Jonathan M.; Yang, Kevin; Swanson, Kyle; Jin, Wengong; Cubillos-Ruiz, Andres; Donghia, Nina M.; MacNair, Craig R.; French, Shawn; Carfrae, Lindsey A.; Bloom-Ackermann, Zohar; Tran, Victoria M.
(February 20, ). "A Deep Learning Approach to Antibiotic Discovery".
D-J Collins - Co-Founder and CEO - Initial | LinkedIn: DJ Collins, B Morahan, J Garcia-Bustos, C Doerig, M Plebanski, A Neild. Essence communications 6 (1), , The Poisson distribution and beyond.Cell. (4): –e doi/ ISSN PMC PMID
- ^"Jim Collins receives funding to harness AI for drug discovery". MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. April 23, Retrieved November 13,
- ^Collins JJ ().
"Random walking during still standing". Phys Rev Lett. 73 (5): –