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Brian Pfleger

Brian Pfleger

Karen and William Monfre Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering
Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor

In the 20th century, chemical engineers developed the methods and the underlying principles to convert fossil fuels into the array of chemical products that enable our current lifestyle. Unfortunately, this system is not sustainable and societal pressures to change it are increasing. The next generation of chemical engineers will develop new methods to make products from renewable resources such as biomass or harness solar energy to power the conversion of carbon dioxide to chemicals. A closed carbon cycle will require efficient chemical and/or biological routes to generate products that can be cleanly combusted to yield energy and carbon dioxide. My long term vision of the chemical industry involves the use of modern biotechnology, and specifically synthetic biology, to engineer systems where chemicals are produced sustainably from sunlight and carbon dioxide.

Synthetic biology combines elements of engineering, mathematics, chemistry, and biology to synthesize novel systems from characterized biological components. With rapid advances in DNA sequencing and synthesis technologies, synthetic biology has evolved from classic recombinant DNA technologies wherein a small number of genes were actively manipulated, to a state where small genomes can be synthesized and transformed into protoplasts to enable self-replication. The next generation of synthetic biologists will develop the tools and understanding necessary to build microorganisms from scratch and help delineate the ethical boundaries of what systems should be engineered. Like other engineering disciplines, synthetic biologists apply fundamental principles of math and science to assemble useful devices and products. The difference in this case is the ability of biological systems to self-replicate and evolve. Therefore, synthetic biology research involves (a) identifying new biological components and quantitatively characterizing their biochemical or biological function, (b) developing tools for quick assembly of novel systems comprised of biological components, (c) engineering novel systems to solve problems and (d) optimizing the performance of biological systems in the context of an evolving organism. My group has made contributions to each of these aspects by studying the production of chemicals from renewable resources. Our work can be categorized into four areas: component discovery and characterization, tool development, metabolic engineering, and systems biology.

Department

Chemical & Biological Engineering

Contact

3629, Engineering Hall
1415 Engineering Dr
Madison, WI
(He/him)

  • PhD 2005, University of California, Berkeley
  • BS 2000, Cornell University

  • Metabolic Engineering
  • Biotechnology
  • Synthetic Biology
  • Natural Products
  • Protein Engineering
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Sustainability

  • 2023 University of Wisconsin-Madison, Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professorship
  • 2022 College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Karen and William Monfre Professorship
  • 2021 Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Bessel Research Award
  • 2018 American Chemical Society BIOT Division, Young Investigator Award
  • 2017 Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Jay and Cynthia Ihlenfeld Professorship
  • 2015 Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Walter J. and Cecile Hunt-Hougen Faculty Scholar
  • 2015 University of Wisconsin-Madison, Vilas Associate
  • 2015 University of Wisconsin-Madison, Vilas Early Career Award
  • 2014 Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Daniel I.C. Wang Award
  • 2014 Society of Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology (SIMB), Young Investigator Award
  • 2013 College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Benjamin Smith Reynolds Award for Excellence in Teaching
  • 2013 Department of Energy, Early Career Award
  • 2013 Purdue University, Inaugural Mellichamp Lecturer
  • 2012 National Science Foundation, NSF CAREER Award
  • 2011 Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Young Investigator Program Award
  • 2010 3M Company, 3M Non-tenured Faculty Award
  • 2010 Polygon Engineering Council, Outstanding Instructor for the Dept. of Chemical & Biological Engineering
  • 2006 NIH Great Lakes Regional Center for Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases Research, Postdoctoral Training Fellowship

  • Shepard, H. S., May, J. C., Zuniga, B. E., Abraham, J. P., Pfleger, B., Young, J. D., & McLean, J. A. (2025). A Fast-Pass, Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry Strategy for Untargeted Metabolic Phenotyping. Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry.
  • Chavkin, T. A., Gonz'alez, Leonardo D,, Cansino-Loeza, B., Larson, R. A., Pfleger, B., & Zavala, V. M. (2025). Codesign of Cyanobacteria Mutant Strains and Processes for Phosphorus Recovery from Livestock Wastewater. ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering.
  • Gonz'alez, Leonardo D,, Cansino-Loeza, B., Chavkin, T. A., Gay, J. D., Larson, R. A., Pfleger, B., & Zavala, V. M. (2025). Techno-economic analysis of an integrated process for cyanobacteria-based nutrient recovery from livestock waste. Computers & Chemical Engineering, 109149.
  • Y~nigez-Gutierrez, Audrey E,, Conley, E., Thomas, M. G., & Pfleger, B. (2025). Uncovering the substrate of olefin synthase loading domains in cyanobacteria Picosynechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002. RSC Chemical Biology, 6(2), 307--316.
  • Venkataraman, M., Infante, V., Sabat, G., Sanos-Giles, K., An'e, Jean-Michel,, & Pfleger, B. (2024). A Novel Membrane-Associated Protein Aids Bacterial Colonization of Maize. ACS Synthetic Biology, 14(1), 206--215.
  • Rashan, E. H., Bartlett, A. K., Khana, D. B., Zhang, J., Jain, R., Smith, A. J., Baker, Z. N., Cook, T., Caldwell, A., Chevalier, A. R., & others, (2024). ACAD10 and ACAD11 enable mammalian 4-hydroxy acid lipid catabolism. bioRxiv.
  • Mishra, S., Perkovich, P. M., & Pfleger, B. (2024). Bio-Based Commodity Chemicals Via Genetically Engineered Microbes.
  • Amendola, C. R., Cordell, W. T., Kneucker, C. M., Szostkiewicz, C. J., Ingraham, M. A., Monninger, M., Wilton, R., Pfleger, B., Salvach'ua, Davinia,, Johnson, C. W., & others, (2024). Comparison of wild-type KT2440 and genome-reduced EM42 Pseudomonas putida strains for muconate production from aromatic compounds and glucose. Metabolic Engineering, 81, 88--99.
  • Mishra, S., Perkovich, P. M., Mitchell, W. P., Venkataraman, M., & Pfleger, B. (2024). Expanding the synthetic biology toolbox of Cupriavidus necator for establishing fatty acid production. Journal of Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology, 51, kuae008.
  • Cordell, W. T., Avolio, G., Takors, R., & Pfleger, B. (2024). Genome reduction improves octanoic acid production in scale down bioreactors. Microbial Biotechnology, 17(11), e70034.

  • CBE 599 - Special Problems (Spring 2025)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Spring 2025)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Spring 2025)
  • CBE 599 - Special Problems (Fall 2024)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Fall 2024)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Fall 2024)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Summer 2024)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Summer 2024)
  • CBE 599 - Special Problems (Spring 2024)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Spring 2024)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Spring 2024)
  • MOL BIOL 699 - Directed Studies in Molecular Biology (Spring 2024)
  • CBE 562 - Special Topics in Chemical Engineering (Fall 2023)
  • CBE 599 - Special Problems (Fall 2023)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Fall 2023)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Fall 2023)
  • MOL BIOL 699 - Directed Studies in Molecular Biology (Fall 2023)
  • CBE 890 - Pre-Dissertator's Research (Summer 2023)
  • CBE 990 - Thesis-Research (Summer 2023)