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Professor Michael J. Betenbaugh

(Prof. Betenbaugh in lab with his student)
Michael J. Betenbaugh
Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Email: beten@jhu.edu
Phone: (410) 516-5461 (Office)
Experience
- Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University. 1999 - Present
- Chair of Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University. July 01, 2002 - Present
- Visiting Scientist, Kyoto Institute of Technology. 2001
- Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University. 1995 - 1999
- Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University. 1988 - 1995
- U.S. Army Medical Res., Inst. of Infect. Diseases, Ft. Detrick, Frederick, Maryland. 1993
- Summer Research Scientist. 1991
- Graduate Research Assistant, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Delaware. 1983 - 1987
- Engineering Analyst, Oil Trading and Supply, Texaco, Inc. 1981 - 1983
Education
- Ph.D., Chemical Engineering. University of Delaware. 1988
- B.S., Chemical Engineering. University of Virginia. 1981
Presentations
- M.J. Betenbaugh, "Strategies for Limiting Apoptosis in Mammalian Cell Cultures," . Metabolic Engineering IV, Il Ciocco, Italy. October, 2002.
- M. J. Betenbaugh, "Humanizing Insect Cells for Biotechnology Applications" . Life Sciences Consortium, Penn State University. May, 2002.
- M. J. Betenbaugh, "Analysis and Engineering of Glycosylation in Insect Cells,”. Baculovirus and Insect Cell Culture Conference, Williamsburg Bioprocessing Foundation. February, 2002.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Engineering Anti-apoptosis Genes into Mammalian Cells to Extend Culture Lifetimes. Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan. November, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Making Insects More Like People: Engineering Mammalian Glycosylation Pathways into Insect Cells. Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan. November, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Manipulating the Glycosylation Pathway in Insect Cells: Part II-Sialic Acid is the Next Step. Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan. November, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Manipulating the Glycosylation Pathway in Insect Cells: Part I-Starting with Galactose. Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan. November, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Life and Death in Cell Culture. Georgia Tech, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Japan. July, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Insects: Friend or Foe. Biochemical Engineering XI, Napa Valley, CA. July, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Carbohydrate Engineering for Generating Sialylated Glycoproteins in Insect Cells. National Science Foundation, Interagency Metabolic Engineering Grantees Workshop, Napa Valley, CA. June, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Engineering Glycosylation Pathways in Insect Cells. Invitrogen, Rockville, MD. March, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Manipulating Pathways to Control Mammalian Survival. DARPA Workshop on Metabolic Engineering, Rockville, MD. March, 2001.
- M.J. Betenbaugh, Turning Pests into People: Humanizing Insect Cells for Biotechnology. University of Colorado, Department of Chemical Engineering, Rockville, MD. February, 2001.
- M. J. Betenbaugh, Future of Biochemical Engineering. NSF Workshop on Future of Biochemical Engineering, Arlington, VA. 2001.
Book Chapters
- Lawrence, S. M., and M. J. Betenbaugh. Addressing Insect Cell Glycosylation Deficiences through Metabolic Engineering. Cell Engineering. Kluwer Academic, Dordrecht, The Netherlands. Edited by M. Al-Rubeai. vol.1. 2002. pp. 0 - 10.
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