Barrick Lab :: Team



Lab Photo

Principal Investigator

Prof. Jeffrey E. Barrick 🐋

Hannah Professor of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology and Entomology (01/2011–present)
B.S. Chemistry, Caltech
Ph.D. Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University
Postdoc, Michigan State University
Professor of Molecular Biosciences, UT Austin (2011-2025)
Twitter: @barricklab

Prof. Barrick has a longstanding interest in fundamental and applied studies of molecular and microbial evolution. He is currently interested in intersections between those topics, synthetic biology, and entomology. He is an avid if plodding swimmer and enjoys the "classics" of literature, including a certain 19th century American novel involving a monomaniacal fascination with an albino cetacean.

Lab Manager

Devin Lake Processing

Lab Manager (08/2025 – present)
B.S. Physics, Michigan State University
B.S. Mathematics, Michigan State University
Email: lakedevi@msu.edu

Devin manages both the Lenski Lab and Barrick Lab where he is the primary keeper of the E. coli long-term evolution experiment (LTEE) and oversees day-to-day operations of the labs, including daily transfers of the LTEE and leading the undergraduate lab tech team. He is also is a PhD student in the Lenski Lab studying long-term evolutionary dynamics of asexual populations and designing tools to better model them. Outside of the lab, Devin can be found frolicking in nature with his wife and dog, playing boardgames with his friends, or training to run with a pumpkin.

Senior Researchers

Dr. Lucio Navarro 🪲

Research Fellow (08/2023 – present) Jointly advised with Nancy Moran
B.S. Biology, Universidad Industrial de Santander, Colombia.
Ph.D. Entomology, Purdue University, Indiana.

Lucio is a Molecular Entomologist with broad research interests in arthropod genomics, insect-microbial symbiosis and insect-plant molecular interactions. He currently works on developing symbiont-mediated RNAi to be used on various applications, including functional genomics and future insect pest management methods. In his free time, Lucio enjoys stargazing and playing on little projects with Raspberry Pi microcomputers.

Dr. Isaac Gifford 🐴

Research Associate (01/2025 – present)
B.S. Microbiology, University of Texas at Austin
Ph.D. Microbiology, University of California Davis
Postdoc University of Texas at Austin

Isaac’s primary research interests are the mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer and its role in genome evolution. He currently works with Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 while his graduate work focused on molecular genetics of Frankia nitrogen-fixing symbioses. Isaac’s personal interests include game design and 21st century sequential art.

Postdoctoral Fellows

Graduate Students

A H M Zuberi Ashraf 🐼

Microbiology Graduate Student (05/2022 – present)
B.S. Biology (Biotechnology Concentration), Minor in Chemistry, Texas A&M University-Central Texas
Email: ashraf.ahmz95@utexas.edu

Zuberi is interested in evolution in symbionts and the different forces that drives it. He is currently working with the honeybee gut symbiont, Snodgrassella alvi. In the past, Zuberi worked as a MLS in a microbiology lab from Baylor Scott & White. During his undergraduate years, Zuberi studied the crop microbiome community in honeybees and how that affected honey composition. Outside of work, Zuberi loves to travel, go on hikes, and try the different types of food all over Austin

Anthony VanDieren 🦂

Microbiology Graduate Student (04/2023 – present)
B.S.E.S. Entomology, University of Georgia
B.S.A. Biological Science, University of Georgia
B.S.A. Chemistry, University of Georgia
Email: avandieren@utexas.edu

Anthony is interested in insects and their corresponding symbionts which affect many aspects of their physiology. Currently, Anthony works with aphids and is attempting to engineer their vertically inherited symbionts. Before coming to UT, Anthony worked as an analytical chemistry lab technician for Henkel and served as a staff entomologist for the Cranbrook Institute of Science in Michigan. Anthony was also an undergraduate reasearcher working on kissing bugs and their gut symbionts. Anthony is a serious entomologist and enjoys finding, rearing, and preserving various exotic insects and arachnids when not in lab.

Tyler de Jong 🪗

Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology Graduate Student (01/2024 – present)
B.S. Biochemistry, University of Texas at Austin
Email: tylerdejong@austin.utexas.edu

Tyler is interested in gene accordions: adaptation systems used by microbes to rapidly diversify and evolve genes via recombination-driven expansions and contractions.To characterize these systems, he is replicating the process through the directed evolution of fluorescent proteins in the naturally competent bacterium ADP1. Before starting graduate school, Tyler worked at a clinical reference lab processing COVID-19 tests and then as a research associate in Nancy Moran’s lab studying the honeybee gut microbiome. Outside of the lab, Tyler enjoys taking walks in Austin's different Greenbelts and hanging out with his cat.

Pranesh Rao 🐧

Cell and Molecular Biology Graduate Student (02/2024 – present)
B.E. Biotechnology, Mumbai University
M.S. Biotechnology, Texas A&M University - College Station

Pranesh is interested in studying the omics of microbial evolution dynamics and developing computational/deep learning genomics research tools. He is currently working on studying evolution dynamics of LTEE E. coli populations using DNA barcoding and high-throughput sequencing techniques. He is also working on supplementing the breseq computational pipeline. Pranesh has experience working in the R&D of molecular diagnostics and carrier screening assays for genetic disorders at Asuragen (Bio-techne), Austin, TX. He is an avid soccer fan and spends a lot of his free time playing, watching or thinking about soccer (or football as he prefers to call it). He also enjoys hiking, biking, and occasionally painting/sketching.

Kathleen Sotelo 🐶

Microbiology Graduate Student (01/2025 – present)
B.S. Biology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, University of Texas at Austin
Email: ksot6127@utexas.edu

Kathleen is interested in further studying symbionts found within insects and how they can influence their hosts. Currently she is working on genetically manipulating honeybee symbionts to secrete peptides that protect their host from pathogens. During and post-undergrad she worked in Nancy Moran’s lab where she aided in projects involving honeybee gut microbiome, took part in characterizing novel Orbaceae species found in the gut of Drosophila, and was in charge of lyophilizing bacterial strains utilized in previous work published by the lab. Outside of work her hobbies include reading, playing video games, and spending time with her dog.

Ira Zibbu 🐁

Cell and Molecular Biology Graduate Student (01/2025 – present)
BS-MS in Biology with a minor in Data Science, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Thiruvananthapuram
Email: irazibbu@utexas.edu
Personal Website: https://ira-zibbu.github.io/
Part evolution enthusiast, part computer nerd, Ira is broadly interested in combining the open-ended nature of experimental evolution with the power of next-generation sequencing and molecular biology to ask questions about how microbes evolve. At the Barrick Lab, she is working to understand how selection, mutation, contingency and drift interact to shape the structure and function of bacterial genomes, and how in turn certain genomic configurations can preclude or promote specific future evolutionary paths. In the context of the LTEE, Ira is looking at large scale genome rearrangements to understand how they evolved, and the effects they have had on the populations. As an undergraduate, Ira hopped around a lot, tinkering with projects on insect ecology, differential equation models of chemotaxis, synthetic biology, and machine learning for protein-ligand affinity predictions. Ira strongly believes that the scientific process benefits from removing barriers to participation, and has interests in teaching, mentoring and outreach. In her spare time, she likes going to the gym, biking on her beloved cycle, musical theater, philosophy of science, contemporary fiction and cooking.

Undergraduate Researchers

Meghna Vergis 🐰

Student Researcher (01/2024–present)
B.S. Biology (in progress)

I'm investigating how Acinetobacter baylyi strains interact with oil and evolving strains of A. baylyi BD4rev to be more efficient at consuming oil. I have been involved in the Microbe Hackers FRI stream for the past year, where I engineer the bacteria that live on blue-green algae to glow in the presence of water contaminants. I like listening to music, cooking, and doing crafts in my free time.

Vibhav Iyengar 🦧

Undergraduate Researcher (01/2023 – present)
B.S. Computational Biology and Plan II (in progress)

I'm a senior majoring in Computational Biology and Plan II. I joined the Barrick Lab through the 2023 iGEM team and have since continued working on engineering bacteria to secrete, novel, antimicrobial peptides. Additionally, I'm working on bioinformatics research using Long-Term Evolution Experiment (LTEE) sequencing data to study E. coli ribosome evolution. In my free time, I enjoy traveling, road cycling and hanging out with my cat and dog.

Undergraduate Lab Technicians

Megan Verhougstraete 🐆

Undergraduate Lab Technician (09/2025 – present)
B.S. Human Biology (in progress)

Megan is a freshman at Michigan State University pursing a B.S. in Human Biology (Nursing), with the hopes of becoming a CRNA. In her free time, she enjoys traveling, being outside, hiking, backpacking, reading, going to the gym, and hanging out with her friends, family, and Jack Russell Terrier. 
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Topic revision: r298 - 2025-09-25 - 14:29:23 - Main.DevinLake
 

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