Jeff Cameron
Assistant Professor
Biochemistry

Office: JSCBB B221/SEEC N374

Lab: JSCBB B250

Education

Ph.D.: Washington University in St. Louis, 2011
Postdoctoral Scholar: University of Wisconsin, Madison 2013-2015
Postdoctoral Scholar: University of California, Berkeley 2011-2013

Areas of Expertise

Renewable Energy, Photochemistry, Molecular Biophysics

Sub-cellular organization of bacterial metabolism

Bacterial metabolism is highly organized in space and time. This spatial and temporal organization of metabolism enables multiple, often competing, reactions to occur simultaneously in the same cell. While subcellular organization in the form of membrane-bound organelles has become the paradigm for eukaryotes, the cellular complexity of bacteria and the inherent relationship to metabolism is only beginning to be appreciated. To unlock the true potential of synthetic biology and design novel microbial systems, signaling pathways and metabolic networks, the subcellular environment must be considered. Thus, my research is focused on using synthetic biology to understand native principles of cellular organization and design novel subcellular architectures for controlling metabolic networks in microbial systems. Cyanobacteria are major primary producers and are unique in their ability to perform oxygenic photosynthesis, nitrogen fixation, and CO2 fixation; these reactions are naturally optimized through spatial and temporal separation. These attributes make cyanobacteria ideal subjects for the modulation of cellular architecture and metabolism.

Photosynthesis

Ancestors of modern day cyanobacteria were the first to perform oxygenic photosynthesis. These reactions have changed the atmospheric composition of this planet and have dramatically shifted the evolutionary trajectory of earth’s inhabitants. In cyanobacteria, the photosynthetic electron transfer complexes are located in the thylakoid membrane system. We are interested in understanding the spatial and temporal organization of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria. Because photosynthesis provides the building blocks for the generation of food, fuel, green chemicals, and other useful products essential for life on earth, understanding how photosynthesis is regulated and identifying potential routes for improvement will benefit society and the environment.

Cameron, J. C., Wilson, S. C., Bernstein, S. L. & Kerfeld, C. A. (2013). Biogenesis of a bacterial organelle: The carboxysome assembly pathway. Cell 155: 1131-1140.

Clark, RL, Cameron JC, Root TW, and Pfleger BF. (2014) Insights into the industrial growth of cyanobacteria from a model of the carbon-concentrating mechanism. AIChE J. 60:1269-1277.