Editorial overview: Tissue, cell and pathway engineering

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Eveline Peeters is an assistant professor in the Research Group of Microbiology at the Department of Bioengineering Sciences at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium). She received her PhD in Bioengineering Sciences at the same university and was a visiting scientist at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (Netherlands), Université Paris-Sud (France) and Institut Pasteur (France). Eveline currently leads a research team in the fields of molecular and synthetic microbiology. She has always been

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Eveline Peeters is an assistant professor in the Research Group of Microbiology at the Department of Bioengineering Sciences at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium). She received her PhD in Bioengineering Sciences at the same university and was a visiting scientist at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (Netherlands), Université Paris-Sud (France) and Institut Pasteur (France). Eveline currently leads a research team in the fields of molecular and synthetic microbiology. She has always been fascinated by extremophilic archaea and currently performs both fundamental and application-driven research of these organisms. Recently, this research has also been extended towards bacteria and filamentous fungi.

Marjan De Mey is professor in Metabolic Engineering at Ghent University where she leads the Metabolic Engineering group at the Centre of Synthetic Biology (CSB). She received her PhD in Bioscience Engineering from Ghent University and was visiting researcher at TU Delft (The Netherlands) and MIT (USA). Marjan’s research interests are at the front of industrial biotechnology, metabolic engineering and synthetic biology focusing on the development of biotechnological production processes.

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