Lynn J. Rothschild
Lynn Justine Rothschild (born May 11, 1957) is an
evolutionary biologist,
astrobiologist and
synthetic biologist at NASA's
Ames Research Center, and is an
adjunct professor at
Brown University. She is an adjunct professor at
Stanford University, where she teaches [http://www.stanford.edu/group/astrobiology/cgi-bin/ Astrobiology and Space Exploration]. At Ames, her research has focused on how life, particularly microbes, has evolved in the context of the physical environment, both on Earth and potentially beyond our planet's boundaries. Her research also explores the use of synthetic biology as an enabling tool for space travel. Since 2007, she has studied the effect of
UV radiation on DNA synthesis, carbon metabolism and mutation/DNA repair in the
Rift Valley of Kenya and the Bolivian Andes, and also in high altitude experiments atop
Mount Everest, in balloon payloads with
BioLaunch. She was the principal investigator of the first free-flyer synthetic biology payload which flew on the DLR
EuCROPIS mission. In 2024, she received a Phase III NIAC grant to explore the use of
fungi for constructing habitats on the
Moon or
Mars.
Rothschild graduated from
Yale University in 1978 and earned a Ph.D. from
Brown University in 1985. In addition to leading her research group at Ames, she serves as the Bio and Bio-Inspired Technologies, Research and Technology Lead for
NASA Headquarters Space Technology Mission Directorate. Rothschild founded the [https://www.agu.org/abscicon Astrobiology Science Conferences] and the ''
International Journal of Astrobiology''. From 2011-2019, she served a faculty Advisor for the Stanford-Brown
iGEM teams, which utilized synthetic biology to advance NASA's mission objectives, including BioWires and a biodegradable drone.
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