Team

About the PI

Tara L. Deans, PhD

Dr. Deans is an Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Utah. During her PhD at Boston University, Dr. Deans focused on synthetic biology in mammalian cells. During her graduate research, she developed a tunable genetic switch coupling repressor proteins and a novel RNAi target design to control gene expression levels. After her graduate work, Dr. Deans went to Johns Hopkins University for her postdoctoral fellowship where she sought an area of research with the greatest opportunity for translating synthetic biology into therapeutic applications. Her postdoctoral work focused on interfacing synthetic biology with biomaterials, in addition to working with stem cells for tissue engineering applications.


Dr. Deans now runs an applied mammalian synthetic biology laboratory where her lab focuses on building novel genetic tools to study the mechanisms of stem cell differentiation for the purpose of directing cell fate decisions. Recently, Dr. Deans received four prestigious awards to support this area of research: 1. the NSF CAREER Award, 2. the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Young Investigator Award, 3. the NIH Trailblazer Award, and 4. the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award. In addition to her research, Dr. Deans was named a STEM Ambassador in the STEM Ambassador Program (STEMAP) at the University of Utah to engage underrepresented groups in STEM fields.

Email: tara.deans@utah.edu

Meet the team!

Farhana Islam

PhD student, Biomedical Engineering

Mitchell Lewis

PhD student, Biomedical Engineering

Acramulhaque (Acram) Kabir

PhD student, Biomedical Engineering

Shwan Javdan

PhD student, Biomedical Engineering

Mahima Choudhury

PhD Student, Biomedical Engineering

Drew Bowers

Undergraduate Student, Biomedical Engineering

Emily Jepsen

MS student, Biomedical Engineering

Travis Seamons

Laboratory Technician

Sam Philp

Laboratory Technician

Peyton Leyendecker

Undergraduate student, Biomedical Engineering

Kaylen Lee

Undergraduate student, Biomedical Engineering

Jake Elliott

Undergraduate student, Biomedical Engineering