NTU Bio-Tech

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Introduction

This institute has been established in August 2006 and began to enroll PhD students since that academic year. The mission of this institute is to provide great research and teaching environment for the following fields that match the directions of our national policies: bioinformatics, nano-biomedical research, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, genomics and proteomics. 

Implication of Logo

DNA is at the center of life. Many studies on life science or development in biotechnology depend largely on unraveling it. Genomic approach thus forms the intersection core among the 3 fields of plant, animal, and microbial biotech in this institute. The microbe in the leaf indicates plant-microbe interactions. The woman head represents the animal and medical fields. The boxes are symbolic for microarray results and represent the bioinformatics. These symbols linked together indicate cross-disciplinary researches that are flourishingly developing in this institute.

Interview of Assistant Professor, Dr. Shu-Han, Yu

Today we interviewed our new faculty, Dr. Shu-Han Yu, who has immuno-oncology, immune modulation, tumor microenvironment, and microbiome professional with 9+ years of academic research experience and 4+ years of industrial experience. She has committed to transforming expertise in translational medicine into non-small-cell lung cancer precision medicine, microbiome profiling, biomarker discovery, characterization, clinical validation, and potential diagnostics.

Interview of Director, Professor Mong-Hsun Tsai

Today we are very happy to interview the new director of Institute of Biotechnology (IOB), Prof. Mong-Hsun Tsai, to talk about his research journey. Graduated from the Department of Zoology at National Taiwan University (NTU), Prof. Tsai has established solid biology backgrounds. Prof. Tsai then decided to proceed his master at National Tsing Hua University (NTHU). His study mainly focused on radiation and heavy metal (such as arsenic) induced damages in molecular, cellular, and phenotype levels. For Dr. Tsai’s dissertation at National Yang Ming University, he mainly studied health effects of chronic low-dose radiation exposed subjects who lived in Co60-contaminated buildings for more than 10 years in Taiwan. Dr. Tsai stayed in NIH for 4 years and came back to NTU as an assistant professor in 1996. Prof. Tsai has been employing biochips and bioinformatics tools for agriculture applications and to discover specific biomarkers for cancer outcome prediction. 

Interview of Professor Jen-Chih Chen

Our interviewee today is Prof Jen-Chih Chen, driving by his curiosity, he is now an associate professor in the Institute of Biotechnology (IOB), and his research expertise includes plant defense, molecular biology, as well as bioenergy.

From the interview, we can feel that Dr. Chen is full of curiosity. He is interested in all sorts of biological phenomena, and enjoys dissecting them. He may have changed his research focus to animal studies, but through searching and experiencing, he returned to his beloved plant science. He told us to keep on trying new things and new ways, and by doing so, we may be able to find something really surprising. Of course, there are always challenges, and keeping on trying and enriching your knowledge should carry you a long way during your research.

Interview of Professor Chi-Te Liu

Today we invite Dr. Chi-Te Liu, an associate professor of the Institute of Biotechnology (IOB), to share his journey of research and development. Dr. Liu’s research interests focus on S.E.A, i.e. Symbiosis (Microbe-Plant interactions), Environmental microbiology, and Agricultural biotechnology. The current projects in his lab including (1) development of multifunctional PGPR agents (biofertilizers & biopesticides), (2) exploring the molecular mechanisms of plant-microbe interactions, (3) biodegradation of synthetic plastics, and (4) employing soil-based microbial batteries for sustainable agriculture and energy.Today we invite Dr. Chi-Te Liu, an associate professor of the Institute of Biotechnology (IOB), to share his journey of research and development. Dr. Liu’s research interests focus on S.E.A, i.e. Symbiosis (Microbe-Plant interactions), Environmental microbiology, and Agricultural biotechnology. The current projects in his lab including (1) development of multifunctional PGPR agents (biofertilizers & biopesticides), (2) exploring the molecular mechanisms of plant-microbe interactions, (3) biodegradation of synthetic plastics, and (4) employing soil-based microbial batteries for sustainable agriculture and energy.

Interview of Professor Je-Ruei Liu

Today we invite Dr. Je-Ruei Liu, professor of the Institute of Biotechnology (IOB) and vice dean of College of Bio-Resources and Agriculture, to share his journey of research. With the fast-pace of modern lifestyle, dietary habits are characterized by erratic eating patterns . Malnutrition, unhealthy diet, smoking, stress and so on, are the presentations of unhealthy life lifestyle. Unwanted diseases and afflictions arise from such dietary habits. Obesity is on the rise and has become a chronic problem, along with aging, diabetes, as well as high blood pressure. Another issue in the modern lifestyle is the declining birth rate. More and more people choose to have pets. Yet the number of overweight and obese in our furry family members also is a growing concern. Professor Je-Ruei Liu has been engaged in research on obesity related topics for many years, hoping to apply natural products to delay aging, to reduce pet weight, and to promote healthier diets for our pets.
 

Interview of Professor Li-Ying, Sung

Professor Sung is an expert in SCNT and among the first to report cloned mice using terminally differentiated postmitotic granulocytes, followed by efficient derivation of mouse ntESCs. Her team also cloned cattle and rabbits before.  She excels in embryonic technologies, such as SCNT, pronuclear microinjection, intracytoplasmic sperm injection, blastocyst injection, oocyte and embryo cryopreservation, as well as iPSC technology. Her research interests are embryology, developmental biology, stem cell biology, as well as development of novel animal models to study human diseases including infertility. She is also applying these modern tools to save endangered animals.

Interview of Professor Kuan-Chen Cheng

Being a professor in both Institute of Biotechnology (IOB) and Institute of Food Sciences and
Technology (FST) at National Taiwan University, Prof Cheng proofs his doubtlessly research
experiences in the areas of microbial bioprocessing, fermentation and biotechnology. His
laboratory currently focusing on four major topics which are bioactivity of medical mushroom,
Wine making and brewing, Development of Senior’s Food, and Biotechnology.

Interview of Professor Shih-Shun Lin

Birds migrate south for winter. Fishes swim to their ideal water current. Unlike animals, plants are not able to move freely forces the plants to adapt to the environment. It is a pleasure to invite Prof. Shih-Shun Lin from the Laboratory of Plant Molecular Biology and Virology to talk about gene regulation mechanisms that help the plants to survive from environmental adversity and disease invasion.
 
 

Personal Conference

Year Paper Title
2008 Chuang-Hao Lu, Shau-Ping Lin, Sheng-Hsiang Li., Protease nexin-1 activity affects sperm fertility and serves as a decapacitation factor, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 Pao-Lin Kuo, Tien-Chi Huang, Christine Hsieh, Kung-Chao Chang, Wei-Chun Chang, Shau-Ping Lin, The implications of human imprinting regulation: lessons from a unique BiParental Hydatidiform Mole case, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory: Germ Cell Meeting, 2008
2008 Ko-Min Kao, Steen K. T. Ooi, Daniel Wolf, Ching-Yu Chuang, Chu-Fan Mo, Wei-Chun Chang, Chih-Jen Chou, Shou-Chen Chen, Chih-Wei Hu, Pin Ouyang, Hsuan-Shu Lee, Stephen P. Goff, Hsin-Chih Wu, Hung-Chih Kuo, Timothy H. Bestor and Shau-Ping Lin, The epigenetic silencing of newly infected retroviruses by DNA methyltransferase 3-like (Dnmt3L), International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 Luca Ching-Wen Cheng, Ching-Yu Chuang, Chuang-Hao Lu, Chu-Fan Mo, Hsin-Yang Li, Ling-Jen Ma, Shau-Ping Lin, Hung-Chih Kuo, Characterization of early germ cells isolated from human embryonic stem (ES) cells via genetic selection, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 Hsiao, S.-H., Cheng, Winston T.-K., Lian, W.-S., Lin, C.-J., Cheng, C.-H., Huang, H.-Y., Cheng, C.-C., Lin, Y.-S., Cheng, P.-H., Lin, S.-P., and Wu, S.-C, Towards an ideal animal model to trace donor cell fates after stem cell therapy: production of stably labeled multipotent mesenchymal stem cells isolated from bone marrow of transgenic pig harboring EGFP, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 Tien-Chi Huang, Pao-Lin Kuo, Christine Hsieh, Kung-Chao Chang, Wei-Chun Chang, Shau-Ping Lin, Biparental Hydatidiform Mole without Imprinting Establishment Defects: Towards Understanding of Different Levels of Human Imprinting Control, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 De-Yao Wang, Shinn-Chih Wu, Shau-Ping Lin, Shih-Hsiang Hsiao, Yi-You Huang, Evaluation of transdifferentiated mesenchymal stem cells using microfluidic patterned coculture with neuron cells, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, September 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, 2008
2008 Hsiao, S.-H., Cheng, C.-C., Lin, S.-P., Huang, H.-Y., Cheng, C.-H., Cheng, Winston T.-K., and Wu, S.-C., Isolation of hematopoietic cell free colonies-derived mesenchymal stem cells from the mouse bone marrow, International Symposia on Stem cells, Epigenetics and Development, 2008
2008 蔡孟勳, Metabolomic profiling on labours exposed to welding fume, 22nd International Symposium on Microscale Sioseparations and Methods for Systems Biology, 2008, Germany
2008 蔡孟勳, Different Signaling Pathways in Response to High Or Low Doses of Ionizing Radiation in Human Lymphoblast cells, 54th Annual meeting of Radiation Research Society, 2008, United States of America