Slava Epstein | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | Russian |
| Occupation(s) | Researcher, academic, entrepreneur. |
| Academic background | |
| Education | M.S., Marine Biology (1981) Ph.D., Microbial Ecology (1986) |
| Alma mater | Moscow State University Shirshov Institute of Oceanology |
| Academic work | |
| Institutions | Northeastern University |
| Website | https://cos.northeastern.edu/people/slava-epstein-2/ |
Slava Epstein is an American academic of Soviet-Jewish origin,researcher and entrepreneur working in the field of Microbial ecology. He is currently a professor in the biology department of Northeastern University and co-founder of NovoBiotic Pharmaceuticals. As a researcher his most covered contribution is the development of the Isolation chip (iChip) and the discovery of a new antibiotic,Teixobactin. Epstein's research has been published in many leading scientific journals including Nature and Science.
Slava Epstein was born in the Soviet Union in a Jewish family. As a kid he was fascinated with astronomy and dreamed of being a physicist,however due to strict Soviet anti-semitic quotas he was advised to switch to biology. [1]
Slava Epstein received an M.S. in marine biology from Moscow State University in 1981 and PhD in microbial ecology from the Russian Academy of Sciences,Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in 1986. [2] For his research he traveled to the White Sea to study protozoan organisms. [3]
Epstein immigrated with his family from the Soviet Union in late 1980's. [4] He first volunteered,then completed a postdoc at the University of Massachusetts,Boston. [5] Since 1992,he has worked at Northeastern University,where he is a professor in the biology department. [6]
His main field of research is microbial ecology along with cultivation and discovery of previously unculturable microorganisms. Along with Kim Lewis,he is credited with development of the Isolation Chip (iChip). [7] He was on the team along with Kim Lewis that discovered a previously unknown antibiotic Teixobactin,by screening soil bacteria using novel cultivation methods,particularly by cultivating the Eleftheria terrae, the antibiotic-producing bacteria in soil,which is the organism's natural environment. [8]
Foreign Policy Magazine Leading Global Thinkers 2015,along with Kim Lewis. For the discovery of antibiotic Taixobactin in a pile of dirt. [9]