John is interested in anything computational and related to molecules. After a PhD in theoretical chemistry, his first postdoc was in Biochemistry at UCL. He has been a lecturer at Birkbeck and at Cambridge, before coming to St Andrews in 2009. Since then, he has done lots of chemoinformatics, quite a lot of bioinformatics and only a little real theoretical chemistry. His scientific interests include computing the binding affinities between proteins and ligands, side-effects and toxicities of pharmaceuticals, and how much of a compound will dissolve in water. His group have worked extensively on the prediction of molecular properties such as melting point and solubility from chemical structure. They also use computational methods to study enzyme reaction mechanisms. They continue to develop the MACiE database of enzyme reaction mechanisms in collaboration with Prof. Janet Thornton at the EMBL-EBI.
Wim Verleyen
Wim Verleyen studied Electronics in Secondary School. He then obtained 2 Master degrees: one in Electrical
Engineering and one in Computer Science. His interests in computer security lead him to be active as a
Software Maintenance Engineer on Electronic Payment terminals and then as a Software Developer for
Authentication and Internet Security Appliances. His research areas moved towards the complexity of
networks, complex systems, medical applications/drug development, mathematical modelling, simulation,
etc. This resulted in a research position at the BISI (Bio-statistics and Medical informatics) department at the
Free University of Brussels, where he took part in an inter-university project on diabetic drug development
and worked as a System Administrator at the medical campus. He studied for a state certificate in Financial
Law at the European College University of Brussels. In the summer of 2008 he was accepted for a studentship
that is partly funded by the School of Biology at the University of St Andrews and partly by a SULSA prize
Systems Biology Studentship.
Olivia Mendivil
Olivia is a PhD candidate at University of St Andrews funded by the BBSRC. The focus of her PhD is in the exciting field of evolutionary biology. Previous to that she did a master in bioinformatics at University of Glasgow. During her master period is when she found out about synthetic biology and iGEM and found it creative, extremely cool and different from what she has done previously. During this summer she has been the lab-bandido trying to bring out the potential scientists in the igem students.