Jenny Zhang
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biophotoelectro.bsky.social
Jenny Zhang
@biophotoelectro.bsky.social

Jenny Zhenqi Zhang is a Chinese-Australian chemist and Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council David Phillips Research Fellow of the Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, where she is also a Fellow of Corpus Christi College (2019-present). She was awarded the 2020 Royal Society of Chemistry Felix Franks Biotechnology Medal for her research into re-wiring photosynthesis to provide sustainable fuel sources. .. more

Biology 25%
Sociology 15%

We have a project coordinator role open for a new EIC consortium project SOLARSPOON. It is suitable for anyone with a Masters or PhD www.cam.ac.uk/jobs/project...
Do you know anyone who might be suitable? Please let me know :)
Project Coordinator and Developer (full time or part time)
We are looking for an enthusiastic, self-motivated, and highly organised person for a newly created role to act as coordinator and developer for the new European Innovation Council-funded
www.cam.ac.uk

The biggest conference on Solar Fuels is coming to Newcastle in September! Join us there.

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

We're excited to announce the @consilium.europa.eu awarded us €4m for #Sunlight-to-#Food conversion ☀️➡️🍔

Coordinated by @biophotoelectro.bsky.social, with
@dtu.dk, @tum.de, @imperialcollegeldn.bsky.social, Solar Foods, we'll deploy bio-photoelectrodes for proteins and fats synthesis

bit.ly/454n7zR
Cambridge to Lead €4M EU-Funded Sunlight-to-Food Technology Project with European Partners | Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry
The Yusuf Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge is proud to announce its leadership of a groundbreaking €4 million innovation grant awarded by the European Innovation Council (EIC) Pa...
bit.ly

This is a bit of a late post, but better late than never

Our native thylakoid membrane electrochemistry paper is finally out! Well done Josh, it's truly a heroic piece of work:
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Dissecting Bioelectrical Networks in Photosynthetic Membranes with Electrochemistry
Photosynthetic membranes contain complex networks of redox proteins and molecules, which direct electrons along various energy-to-chemical interconversion reactions important for sustaining life on Earth. Analyzing and disentangling the mechanisms, regulation, and interdependencies of these electron transfer pathways is extremely difficult, owing to the large number of interacting components in the native membrane environment. While electrochemistry is well established for studying electron transfer in purified proteins, it has proved difficult to wire into proteins within their native membrane environments and even harder to probe on a systems-level the electron transfer networks they are entangled within. Here, we show how photosynthetic membranes from cyanobacteria can be wired to electrodes to access their complex electron transfer networks. Measurements of native membranes with structured electrodes revealed distinctive electrochemical signatures, enabling analysis from the scale of individual proteins to entire biochemical pathways as well as their interplay. This includes measurements of overlapping photosynthetic and respiratory pathways, the redox activities of membrane-bound quinones, along with validation using in operando spectroscopic measurements. Importantly, we further demonstrated extraction of electrons from native membrane-bound Photosystem I at −600 mV versus SHE, which is ∼1 V more negative than from purified photosystems. This finding opens up opportunities for biotechnologies for solar electricity, fuel, and chemical generation. We foresee this electrochemical method being adapted to analyze other photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic membranes, as well as aiding the development of new biocatalytic, biohybrid, and biomimetic systems.
pubs.acs.org

We have a PhD position open, joint with Svetlana Menkin's group, to develop scanning electrochemical microscopy on living systems. Home students only. Please send any interested applicants my way :), applications close in 7 days.

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

Reposted by Jenny Zhang

Reposted by Jenny Zhang