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First-ever Informatics PhD heads to renowned lab

The first-ever PhD recipient from Indiana University's School of Informatics, founded in 2000 as the first school of its kind in the United States, has already begun research at one of the leading bioengineering programs in the world.

James Costello

Chris Meyer

James Costello, who in August became the first-ever PhD recipient from the Indiana University School of Informatics, is now using computational approaches to model genetic interaction in one of the world's leading synthetic biology labs.

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IU Bloomington School of Informatics and Computing PhD graduate James Costello, whose degree was recorded by the university Aug. 31, is already working with James J. Collins, an internationally recognized synthetic biologist, at Boston University's Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

"This is a milestone moment for the School of Informatics and Indiana University," said Bobby Schnabel, dean of the School of Informatics. "And it is particularly exciting that the first informatics doctorate goes to Jim, who has had such outstanding successes here at IU Bloomington, and has such a bright future before him."

Costello is now doing postdoctoral work at Boston University with a fellowship from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, where he will work in a lab run by Collins, a Rhodes Scholar who in 2003 became the first bioengineer to receive a MacArthur Foundation "Genius Award." Collins is considered a pioneer in the field of synthetic biology.

"Essentially I will be using computational approaches to model how genes interact with each other," Costello said. "I will be working on both synthetic and systems biology projects involving bacteria and mammalian systems."

While in Bloomington Costello worked with associate professor of informatics and data mining expert Mehmet Dalkilic and assistant professor of biology and adjunct assistant professor of informatics Justen Andrews at the IU Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics. Specifically, he worked on the design, development and implementation of integration methods for connecting disparate sources of Drosophila data to better inform researchers of functional relationships between genes.

Costello received a master of science in informatics from IU in 2004 after coming from the University of Iowa with undergraduate degrees in biology and economics. During his 2003-04 year at IU he received both the School of Informatics's outstanding teaching and achievement awards and the IU Graduate and Professional Student Organization's outstanding graduate student award.

The IU School of Informatics offers bachelor's and PhD programs in informatics and computer science, and master's programs in computer science, bioinformatics, chemical informatics, human computer interaction design and security informatics. Founded in 2000 as the first school of its kind in the United States, the Indiana University School of Informatics is dedicated to research and teaching across a broad range of computing and information technology, with emphases on science, applications and societal implications. For more information, visit www.informatics.indiana.edu.