Department of Biotechnology, German University Bangladesh

Department of Biotechnology, German University Bangladesh The Department of Biotechnology (BT) at German University Bangladesh (GUB) under The Faculty of Engineering Sciences offers four-year Bachelor of Science.

Biotechnology is an applied branch of biological science that uses the method and process for transformation of natural raw materials into useful product by the application of living organism in the laboratories as well as in the industries. The mission of the Biotechnology Program is to promote education and research in biotechnology and provide academic and professional excellence for immediate productivity in industrial, governmental, or clinical settings for an ultimate benefit of society and environment. Biotechnology has already begun to change traditional industries such as food processing and fermentation. It has also given rise to the development of a whole new technology for industrial production of hormones, antibiotics and other chemicals, food and energy sources and processing of waste materials. This industry must be staffed by trained biotechnologists who not only have a sound basis of biological knowledge, but a thorough grounding in engineering methods. At GUB, the faculty of Engineering Sciences is unique in having, as members of its academic staff, teachers who have specialized in biotechnology. The degree program also places a major emphasis on practical work and on developing a wide range of analytical and manipulative skills, including pilot plant operational skills appropriate to the biotechnologist. Graduates will be in an ideal position to exploit the opportunities for biotechnology in Bangladesh, in established or developing companies.

A mesmerizing class party has been arranged by our students. End of Summer semester 2017.What an amazing semester they h...
11/08/2017

A mesmerizing class party has been arranged by our students. End of Summer semester 2017.What an amazing semester they had !!

Modernized and well equipped laboratory is our specialty that makes us different from others.
03/08/2017

Modernized and well equipped laboratory is our specialty that makes us different from others.

Admission Going on!!!
26/07/2017

Admission Going on!!!

A five-part vaccine can be the key player in preventing HIV....The long and largely unsuccessful effort to develop a vac...
12/06/2017

A five-part vaccine can be the key player in preventing HIV....

The long and largely unsuccessful effort to develop a vaccine against HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, suffered a major setback in 2009, when the experimental shot RV144 was shown in a trial to be just 31% effective. Now scientists led by Duke University are taking insights from that trial, which was conducted in Thailand, and using them to design a more comprehensive vaccination approach.

In a study in monkeys, the Duke team achieved 55% protection from an HIV-like virus with a vaccine that builds on RV144, the university announced in a press release. They increased the level of protection by using a “pentavalent,” or five-part vaccine.

Working with colleagues at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the scientists added three targets to the “viral envelope,” which includes glycoproteins that allow the virus to bind to and enter host cells. Rather than zeroing in on two glycoproteins, as RV144 does, the experimental vaccine adds three targets that prompt antibody responses to other regions of the viral envelope, according to the release. They published their research in the journal Nature Communications.

"This is a proof-of-concept that provides a strategy to improve upon the first HIV vaccine regimen that provided limited protection in people," said lead author Todd Bradley of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute.

The HIV vaccine development effort has experienced a renaissance of sorts over the last couple of years. In May 2016, the NIH announced plans to start a large-scale HIV vaccine trial in South Africa testing the HVTN 100 regimen, which consists of one experimental vaccine each from Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline. In late 2015, the European Commission poured $25 million into a collaboration between 22 companies and organizations working to advance HIV vaccine research.

In April 2015, Duke received $20 million in funding from the NIH for its HIV vaccine research. Part of Duke’s work has involved tracking an individual in Africa with HIV who is providing blood samples periodically. They are studying the evolution of the virus and the patient’s immune response and using the knowledge gained to improve vaccine development.

The next step for the developers of the pentavalent vaccine is to try to determine if the boosted protection against HIV came from all or just some of the three targets that were added to the viral envelope.

Source: Collected from online

31/05/2017
Keira Havens, a prominent biologist, she shared her visions on Biotechnology at TEDxFrankfurt.
31/05/2017

Keira Havens, a prominent biologist, she shared her visions on Biotechnology at TEDxFrankfurt.

Keira Havens gave insights on the beauty of Biotechnology at TEDxFrankfurt (http://www.tedxfrankfurt.de). Biotechnology is a fascinating and complex field, b...

Dear Biotech lovers,Go to the video link and See your scopes and career opportunities.Cheers!
31/05/2017

Dear Biotech lovers,
Go to the video link and See your scopes and career opportunities.
Cheers!

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