Dr Tim Overton BSc PhD

School of Chemical Engineering
Reader in Microbial Biotechnology

Contact details

Address
School of Chemical Engineering
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Dr Tim Overton is a biochemist and molecular microbiologist who is interested in applying molecular biology and single-cell techniques to understand and develop bioprocesses. He is active in microbial flow cytometry research and collaborates widely with bioprocess engineers, molecular microbiologists, cell biologists and environmental microbiologists to develop new methods of answering fundamental questions on a single-cell level.

His research also focuses on using bacteria to make useful products such as protein drugs and small molecules, and the bacterial responses to stress encountered in such processes. Current and recent research funding has come from the BBSRC, TSB and EU FP7. 

Tim Overton is part of the Healthcare Technologies Institute (HTI), an interdisciplinary network of over 70 academics working together to advance new technologies and treatments that encourage better tissue healing and rehabilitation tools.  The HTI brings together leading experts from a variety of disciplines across the University of Birmingham, including chemical engineering, biomedical science, computer science, applied mathematics, chemistry and physics. Researchers across campus are working collaboratively to speed up the translation of new discoveries into health applications.

Qualifications

  • PGCert in Learning & Teaching in HE, University of Birmingham, 2012
  • PhD in Biochemistry, University of Birmingham, 2003
  • BSc (Hons) in Biochemistry with Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Birmingham, 1999

Biography

Tim Overton is interested in the ways in which bacteria sense and respond to external stimuli, and how this translates to changes in physiology and behaviour. His research uses this information in three main areas:

  • Understanding how biofilms form and how we can prevent this from happening;
  • Improving processes where bacteria make useful products for us, such as insulin; and
  • Killing bacteria using antibiotics and challenging antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

 

Dr Overton trained as a biochemist (BSc and PhD) and then was a postdoctoral researcher, investigating bacteria responses to oxygen and various stresses. He became interested in bioprocessing of biopharmaceuticals during a project in collaboration with GSK, studying the production of difficult recombinant proteins in E. coli. 

Dr Overton took up a position in the School of Chemical Engineering and has built a research group studying how understanding of microbial physiology can be used to improve real-world situations, either by killing bacteria or keeping them alive. 

Dr Overton is Postgraduate Taught director in the School of Chemical Engineering. He is a school Wellbeing Champion and Mental Health First Aider. He is actively involved in biological safety (University Advisory Group on Biological Hazards, LES/EPS GM safety committee, School GMO safety officer).

He reviews widely for journals and funding bodies, having been on BBSRC committee D, and is currently a UKRI Talent and EPSRC Peer Review College member. He co-organises the Applied Synthetic Biology in Europe conference series (2012-date).   

Teaching

Teaching topics include basic biology and molecular biology, systems and synthetic biology, genomic technologies, fermentation and cell culture and analysis of microbial physiology. Dr Overton also supervises fermentation practicals at laboratory and pilot scale (~100 litres).

Postgraduate supervision

We are interested in how bacteria sense and respond to external stimuli, and how this translates to changes in physiology and behaviour. We focus on three main areas:

• Understanding how biofilms form and how we can prevent this from happening;
• Improving processes where bacteria make useful products for us, such as insulin; and
• Killing bacteria using antibiotics and challenging antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

Research

Research is split into three main themes. In each theme we are interested in applying microbial physiology to solve real-world problems and optimise processes. We like to take multidisciplinary approaches and work with industry to do this.

 

Antibiotics and AMR

Antibiotics are essential for modern medicine, permitting treatment of infection and ensuring that invasive operations are safe. However, many bacteria are becoming more resistant to antibiotics, meaning that it is harder (or impossible) to kill them.  We are interested in the ways in which AMR is regulated, an in particular:

  • The relationship between energy metabolism and AMR;
  • How AMR and biofilm formation are linked; and
  • How antibiotics get inside bacteria.

 

Bacterial biofilms

Bacteria form biofilms, communities of cells immobilised onto surfaces by secreted polymeric substances, in many settings. Biofilms are very difficult to prevent and remove from surfaces, and have massive impacts on human life (economic, health, societal, and environmental). Within this area we investigate several approaches to understand how biofilms form and how we can interact with them.

  • Understanding how biofilm formation is driven by external stimuli;
  • The links between biofilm formation and central metabolism; and
  • Prevention of biofilm formation using vibration.

 

Bacteria for useful products

Microbes are used for the production of many high-value products in fermentation processes. We optimise these processes to increase yields, shorten development times and accelerate innovation in bioproduction. We have expertise in fermentation process development, intensification, and scale-up to bioreactors.

Current research focuses on recombinant protein production, centred around two main themes at present:

  • Novel promoters for controlling recombinant protein production
  • Improving periplasmic protein production

We are also working on formulation of probiotics for dairy applications.

Previous work has included production of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) in C. necator, and using magnetotactic bacteria to make useful magnetic nanoparticles, work which continues in a collaboration.

 

 

Other activities

  • Member of the European Federation of Biotechnology executive board
  • Co-chair of the European Federation of Biotechnology Bioengineering & Bioprocessing section
  • Organiser of Applied Synthetic Biology in Europe conference series
  • Editorial board member for Biotechnology Letters
  • Refereeing for BMC Microbiology, FEMS Microbiology Letters, DNA Sequence, Powder Technology and the MRC and National Science Foundation
  • Peer review for FEBS Letters, Biotechnology Letters, BMC Microbiology, BMC Research Notes, FEMS Microbiology Letters, Powder Technology and DNA Sequence.
  • Grant application review for BBSRC, MRC and the National Science Foundation

Publications

Recent publications

Article

Fernández-Castané, A, Li, H, Ebeler, M, Franzreb, M, Overton, T & Thomas, O 2024, 'A scalable biomanufacturing platform for bacterial magnetosomes', Food and Bioproducts Processing, vol. 144, FBP-D-23-00899, pp. 110-122. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fbp.2024.01.005

Whittle, E, Orababa, O, Osgerby, A, Siasat, P, Element, S, Blair, J & Overton, T 2024, 'Efflux pumps mediate changes to fundamental bacterial physiology via membrane potential', mBio. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.03.535035, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02370-24

Brean, A, Overton, T, Bracewell, D, Franzreb, M & Thomas, O 2024, 'Integrated system for temperature-controlled fast protein liquid chromatography. IV. Continuous ‘one-column’ ‘low-salt’ hydrophobic interaction chromatography', Journal of Chromatography A, vol. 1731, 465212. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2024.465212

Bazzoli, DG, Mahmoodi, N, Verrill, T-A, Overton, TW & Mendes, PM 2024, 'Nanovibrational Stimulation of Escherichia coli Mitigates Surface Adhesion by Altering Cell Membrane Potential', ACS Nano. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c11000

Fallatah, H, Overton, T, Ali-Boucetta, H & Gkatzionis, K 2023, 'Impact of Environmental Stresses on the Antibacterial Activity of Graphene Oxide (GO) Nanoparticles against P. putida Biofilms', Microorganisms, vol. 11, no. 3, 609. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11030609

Zulkifly, A, Selas Castineiras, T & Overton, T 2023, 'Optimisation of recombinant TNFα production in Escherichia coli using GFP fusions and flow cytometry', Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology, vol. 11, 1171823. https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2023.1171823

Mahmoodi, N, Bazzoli, D, Overton, T & Mendes, P 2023, 'Plasma activation and its nanoconfinement effects boost surface anti-biofouling performance', Advanced Materials Interfaces, vol. 10, no. 6, 2202087. https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202202087

Hothersall, J, Lai, S, Zhang, N, Godfrey, R, Ruanto, P, Bischoff, S, Robinson, C, Overton, T, Busby, S & Browning, D 2022, 'Inexpensive protein overexpression driven by the NarL transcription activator protein', Biotechnology and Bioengineering, vol. 119, no. 6, pp. 1614-1623. https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.28071

Hothersall, J, Osgerby, A, Godfrey, R, Overton, T, Busby, S & Browning, D 2022, 'New vectors for urea-inducible recombinant protein production', New Biotechnology, vol. 72, pp. 89-96. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2022.10.003

Adoni, P, Romanyuk, A, Overton, T & Fernandez-Trillo, F 2022, 'Polymer-induced biofilms for enhanced biocatalysis', Materials Horizons, vol. 9, no. 10, pp. 2592-2602. https://doi.org/10.1039/D2MH00607C

Pasini, M, Fernández-Castané, A, Caminal, G, Overton, T & Ferrer, P 2022, 'Process Intensification at the expression system level for the production of 1-phosphate aldolase in antibiotic-free E. coli fed-batch cultures', Journal of Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology, vol. 49, no. 4, kuac018. https://doi.org/10.1093/jimb/kuac018

Masoura, M, Milner, M, Overton, T, Gkatzionis, K & Lund, P 2022, 'Use of transposon directed insertion-site sequencing to probe the antibacterial mechanism of a model honey on E. coli K-12', Frontiers in Microbiology, vol. 12, 803307. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.803307

Preprint

Whittle, E, Orababa, O, Element, S, Blair, J & Overton, T 2023 'Efflux pumps mediate changes to fundamental bacterial physiology via membrane potential' bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.03.535035

Review article

Osgerby, A & Overton, T 2023, 'Approaches for High-throughput Quantification of Periplasmic Recombinant Proteins', New Biotechnology, vol. 77, pp. 149-160. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2023.09.003

Working paper

Adoni, P, Romanyuk, A, Overton, T & Fernandez-Trillo, F 2022 'Polymer-induced biofilms for enhanced biocatalysis' ChemRxiv, ChemRxiv. https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-gh1x3

View all publications in research portal

Expertise

Industrial microbiology, bioprocessing and biochemical engineering; recombinant protein production, biofilms and their uses; flow cytometry and FACS.