Nathan Hillson

Dr. Hillson earned his Ph.D. in Biophysics from Harvard Medical School. He did his postdoctoral work in Developmental (Micro)Biology at Stanford University School of Medicine. Dr. Hillson's work has spanned the realms of the private (notably as co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer at TeselaGen Biotechnologies, Inc.) and public biotechnology sectors. As Department Head of BioDesign within the Biological Systems & Engineering Division, Dr. Hillson leads scientists and engineers within Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory whose domain expertise spans synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, microbiology, microbial communities, software engineering, and laboratory automation. As the Lead Principal Investigator of the U.S. DOE Agile Biofoundry, Dr. Hillson leads an even broader group of scientists and engineers distributed across 7 U.S. DOE National Labs towards the development of biomanufacturing tools, processes, and partnerships that enable sustainable industrial production of renewable fuels and chemicals for the nation. This complements discovery engines (such as the Joint Genome Institute, to which Dr. Hillson also contributes), by enabling the discovered (yet small scale, low titer/rates/yields) pathways to be more quickly and reliably optimized and scaled. Efforts are supported by DOE-funded entities, including the DOE Agile BioFoundry, DOE Joint BioEnergy Institute, DOE Joint Genome Institute, as well as by industry-sponsored collaborations.

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Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
Tuesday
May 06
Building In Trust: How to Work Together for a Safe and Secure Bioeconomy
3:30 PM

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4:15 PM

The bioeconomy is at a pivotal moment and has the potential to drive innovation that addresses global challenges. Yet, as the industry grows, so does its risk landscape. This panel explores how collaboration, competition, coordination, and cooperation can collectively safeguard the bioeconomy while fostering innovation. Industry leaders will discuss strategies to build trust, mitigate risks, and establish shared frameworks for safety and security. Join us to discuss how unified action can ensure the bioeconomy’s transformative potential is realized in a way that upholds safety, security, and efficiency.

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