Past BECUR Keynote Speakers
2023: Joyce Schroeder, PhD
https://schroederlab.arizona.edu/
Dr. Joyce Schroeder is a Professor and the Head of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Arizona. She earner her PhD at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1998 and performed her postdoctoral fellowship at the Mayo Clinic before joining the University of Arizona as an Assistant Professor in 2002. Her research program studies the basic mechanisms of breast cancer to develop therapeutics to treat metastatic breast cancer. Her federally funded research program has yielded over 40 publications, 15 patents, and spun off a biotech company that focuses on the translation of cancer therapeutics from her laboratory. She has also trained 15 PhD students and 5 masters students, in addition to over 60 undergraduates in her lab. She teaches at the graduate and undergraduate level, where she currently instructs a senior-level course in cancer biology. She has also written a textbook for an undergraduate course on cancer biology and therapeutic interventions.
https://schroederlab.arizona.edu/
Dr. Joyce Schroeder is a Professor and the Head of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Arizona. She earner her PhD at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1998 and performed her postdoctoral fellowship at the Mayo Clinic before joining the University of Arizona as an Assistant Professor in 2002. Her research program studies the basic mechanisms of breast cancer to develop therapeutics to treat metastatic breast cancer. Her federally funded research program has yielded over 40 publications, 15 patents, and spun off a biotech company that focuses on the translation of cancer therapeutics from her laboratory. She has also trained 15 PhD students and 5 masters students, in addition to over 60 undergraduates in her lab. She teaches at the graduate and undergraduate level, where she currently instructs a senior-level course in cancer biology. She has also written a textbook for an undergraduate course on cancer biology and therapeutic interventions.
2021: Betül Kaçar, PhD
https://bact.wisc.edu/people_profile.php?t=rf&p=bkacar
"The Kaçar Lab investigates the origins of life, the biology of early Earth and how understanding life’s emergence and early mechanisms may assist finding life beyond Earth. We are home to the NASA Astrobiology Center for Early Life and Evolution. Our integrative approach enables the study of biomolecule-scale macroevolutionary trends that span billions of years of history and is a fundamentally new methodology with which to study the origins and early evolution of life. The overall goal of our work is to assess the possible environmental impacts of ancient enzymes on global-scale signatures that record biological activity. Our work has been recognized by various media outlets, such as the UN Women, UNICEF, Library of Congress, European Union Delegation on Education, NOVA Science, BBC, NPR Science Friday, MIT Technology Review, Vice News, Wired, PBS, CNN and others."
2019: Amy Pasquinelli, PhD
https://labs.biology.ucsd.edu/pasquinelli/
"The discovery of microRNAs (miRNAs) has revolutionized our understanding of gene control. Genetic studies in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (FIG 1) revealed the first members of what we now recognize as an extensive family of regulatory RNAs that exist in most multicellular organisms (reviewed in Pasquinelli 2002 & 2012; Massirer & Pasquinelli 2006; Aalto & Pasquinelli 2012). Specific miRNAs have been found to play key roles in controlling development, stem cell fates and neuronal differentiation, and mutations in human miRNA genes have been linked to oncogenic and other disease states (reviewed in Pasquinelli et al., 2005; Godshalk et al., 2010). The Pasquinelli lab couples C. elegans genetics with molecular and biochemical techniques to understand the basic mechanisms of miRNA expression and function and to elucidate the biological roles of specific miRNAs in cellular differentiation programs."
https://labs.biology.ucsd.edu/pasquinelli/
"The discovery of microRNAs (miRNAs) has revolutionized our understanding of gene control. Genetic studies in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (FIG 1) revealed the first members of what we now recognize as an extensive family of regulatory RNAs that exist in most multicellular organisms (reviewed in Pasquinelli 2002 & 2012; Massirer & Pasquinelli 2006; Aalto & Pasquinelli 2012). Specific miRNAs have been found to play key roles in controlling development, stem cell fates and neuronal differentiation, and mutations in human miRNA genes have been linked to oncogenic and other disease states (reviewed in Pasquinelli et al., 2005; Godshalk et al., 2010). The Pasquinelli lab couples C. elegans genetics with molecular and biochemical techniques to understand the basic mechanisms of miRNA expression and function and to elucidate the biological roles of specific miRNAs in cellular differentiation programs."
2018: Brian Kelch, PhD
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Assistant Professor, Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology Pew's Scholar PhD, University of California, San Francisco The Kelch lab is interested in determining how macromolecular machines work, with special emphasis on machines involved in DNA replication and repair. Understanding how these machines work will not only illuminate the underpinnings of these critically important cellular pathways, but can also lead to new targets for the development of novel cancer therapeutics and antibiotics. We use a combination of biochemistry, biophysics and structural methods to elucidate how these vitally important protein complexes are integrated into cellular pathways. |
2017: James M. Berger, PhD
Johns Hopkins Medical School
Co-Director, Cancer Chemical and Structural Biology Program, Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Professor of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry
"Stepping Mechanism and Dynamical Control of a Biomolecular Rotary Motor"
My laboratory’s research is focused on understanding how multi-subunit assemblies use ATP for overcoming topological challenges within the chromosome and controlling the flow of genetic information. We are particularly interested in developing mechanistic models that explain how macromolecular machines transduce chemical energy into force and motion, and in determining how cells exploit these complexes and their activities for regulating the initiation of DNA replication, chromosome superstructure, and other essential nucleic acid transactions. Our principal approaches rely on a variety of structural, biochemical, and biophysical methods to define the architecture, function, evolution, and regulation of biological complexes. We also have extensive interests in mechanistic enzymology and the study of small-molecule inhibitors of therapeutic potential, the development of chemical approaches to trapping weak protein/protein and protein/nucleic acid interactions, and in using microfluidics for biochemical investigations of protein dynamics and structure.
Co-Director, Cancer Chemical and Structural Biology Program, Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Professor of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry
"Stepping Mechanism and Dynamical Control of a Biomolecular Rotary Motor"
My laboratory’s research is focused on understanding how multi-subunit assemblies use ATP for overcoming topological challenges within the chromosome and controlling the flow of genetic information. We are particularly interested in developing mechanistic models that explain how macromolecular machines transduce chemical energy into force and motion, and in determining how cells exploit these complexes and their activities for regulating the initiation of DNA replication, chromosome superstructure, and other essential nucleic acid transactions. Our principal approaches rely on a variety of structural, biochemical, and biophysical methods to define the architecture, function, evolution, and regulation of biological complexes. We also have extensive interests in mechanistic enzymology and the study of small-molecule inhibitors of therapeutic potential, the development of chemical approaches to trapping weak protein/protein and protein/nucleic acid interactions, and in using microfluidics for biochemical investigations of protein dynamics and structure.
2016: Michael Rossmann, PhD
Purdue University
Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Science
Michael Rossmann is a German-American biophysicist, crystallographer and Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences at Purdue University. In 1956 he received his PhD at the University of Glasgow for chemical crystallography. Dr. Rossmann worked on the structure of hemoglobin along with Max Perutz at Cambridge University, down the hall from Nobel Prize winners Francis Crick and James Watson. In 1973 Rossmann published the description of the Rossmann fold, a structural motif found in proteins associated with nucleotide-binding properties. FAD and NADP cofactor binding in proteins thus use Rossmann fold motifs; examples of such proteins are glutamate dehydrogenase and dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase, which are components of amino acid catabolism, cellular respiration, and the citric acid cycle. Currently the Rossmann group is studying structural features of enteroviruses, which have profound implications in combating viral infections.
Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Science
Michael Rossmann is a German-American biophysicist, crystallographer and Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences at Purdue University. In 1956 he received his PhD at the University of Glasgow for chemical crystallography. Dr. Rossmann worked on the structure of hemoglobin along with Max Perutz at Cambridge University, down the hall from Nobel Prize winners Francis Crick and James Watson. In 1973 Rossmann published the description of the Rossmann fold, a structural motif found in proteins associated with nucleotide-binding properties. FAD and NADP cofactor binding in proteins thus use Rossmann fold motifs; examples of such proteins are glutamate dehydrogenase and dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase, which are components of amino acid catabolism, cellular respiration, and the citric acid cycle. Currently the Rossmann group is studying structural features of enteroviruses, which have profound implications in combating viral infections.
2015: Olke Uhlenbeck, PhD
Northwestern University
Professor Emeritus
Research summary
Elongation during protein synthesis is a regulated process that involves activation and transportation of tRNA. Activation of tRNA occurs when an amino acid, catalyzed by aminoacyl tRNA synthase, binds to the tRNA structure. Activated tRNA is then transported by elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), which is bound by GTP in its active state, to the ribosome. Hydrolysis of GTP occurs and causes EF-Tu dissociation from the ribosome and tRNA. The Uhlenbeck lab has written extensively on tRNA and its associated proteins. Recently, the Uhlenbeck lab developed an assay to monitor activity between EF-Tu and tRNA as well as EF-Tu and ribosomal L11. These assays are particularly relevant in high throughput screening for ribosomal antibiotics, such as a streptomycin and paromomycin.
Professor Emeritus
Research summary
Elongation during protein synthesis is a regulated process that involves activation and transportation of tRNA. Activation of tRNA occurs when an amino acid, catalyzed by aminoacyl tRNA synthase, binds to the tRNA structure. Activated tRNA is then transported by elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), which is bound by GTP in its active state, to the ribosome. Hydrolysis of GTP occurs and causes EF-Tu dissociation from the ribosome and tRNA. The Uhlenbeck lab has written extensively on tRNA and its associated proteins. Recently, the Uhlenbeck lab developed an assay to monitor activity between EF-Tu and tRNA as well as EF-Tu and ribosomal L11. These assays are particularly relevant in high throughput screening for ribosomal antibiotics, such as a streptomycin and paromomycin.
2014: Roy Parker, PhD
University of Colorado, Boulder
Cech-Leinwand Endowed Chair of Biochemistry
The control of biological processes, such as cellular growth and differentiation, is dependent on how the genetic material within a cell is expressed. The cellular physiology of mRNA—including mRNA processing, transport, localization, and turnover—is central to the process of gene expression. In my laboratory, we are focusing on understanding how cells regulate the translation and degradation of mRNAs. In eukaryotic cells the decay rates and the translation rates of individual mRNAs can be quite different and these processes can be regulated in response to a variety of signals, including specific hormones and viral infection, or as a consequence of differentiation. Our goal is to understand the molecular mechanisms that control mRNA stability and translation rate in eukaryotic cells, using yeast as a model system.
Cech-Leinwand Endowed Chair of Biochemistry
The control of biological processes, such as cellular growth and differentiation, is dependent on how the genetic material within a cell is expressed. The cellular physiology of mRNA—including mRNA processing, transport, localization, and turnover—is central to the process of gene expression. In my laboratory, we are focusing on understanding how cells regulate the translation and degradation of mRNAs. In eukaryotic cells the decay rates and the translation rates of individual mRNAs can be quite different and these processes can be regulated in response to a variety of signals, including specific hormones and viral infection, or as a consequence of differentiation. Our goal is to understand the molecular mechanisms that control mRNA stability and translation rate in eukaryotic cells, using yeast as a model system.
2013: Kim Orth, PhD
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Professor, Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Earl A. Forsythe Chair in Biomedical Science
Dr. Orth is interested in elucidating the activity of virulence factors from pathogenic bacteria to gain novel molecular insight into eukaryotic signaling systems. Many virulence factors are secreted by bacteria using a type III secretion system (T3SS) resembling a needle-like structure that efficiently translocates effector proteins from bacteria into the cytosol of a host cell. Effectors have evolved in a manner similar to many of the viral oncogenes; a eukaryotic activity is usurped and modified by the pathogen for its own advantage. Her lab works on T3SS systems and bacterial effectors to understand how signaling systems in the eukaryotic host can be manipulated by bacterial pathogens. These studies provide novel insight into the molecular workings of eukaryotic signal transduction.
Professor, Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Earl A. Forsythe Chair in Biomedical Science
Dr. Orth is interested in elucidating the activity of virulence factors from pathogenic bacteria to gain novel molecular insight into eukaryotic signaling systems. Many virulence factors are secreted by bacteria using a type III secretion system (T3SS) resembling a needle-like structure that efficiently translocates effector proteins from bacteria into the cytosol of a host cell. Effectors have evolved in a manner similar to many of the viral oncogenes; a eukaryotic activity is usurped and modified by the pathogen for its own advantage. Her lab works on T3SS systems and bacterial effectors to understand how signaling systems in the eukaryotic host can be manipulated by bacterial pathogens. These studies provide novel insight into the molecular workings of eukaryotic signal transduction.
2012: Daniel Herschlag, PhD
Stanford University School of Medicine
Professor of Biochemistry, Senior Associate Dean of Graduate Education and Postdoctoral Affairs
The Herschlag group is currently studying the catalysis of ketosteroid isomerase and group I ribozymes. Their research is based on the notion that enzymes are not "simply a collection of catalytic amino acids and cofactors" The unique arrangement of the protein scaffold allows certain intramolecular interactions that yields a precise active site. In effect, the study of enzyme catalysis, from a kinetics perspective, provides the next level of biochemical understanding.
Professor of Biochemistry, Senior Associate Dean of Graduate Education and Postdoctoral Affairs
The Herschlag group is currently studying the catalysis of ketosteroid isomerase and group I ribozymes. Their research is based on the notion that enzymes are not "simply a collection of catalytic amino acids and cofactors" The unique arrangement of the protein scaffold allows certain intramolecular interactions that yields a precise active site. In effect, the study of enzyme catalysis, from a kinetics perspective, provides the next level of biochemical understanding.
2011: Indraneel Ghosh, PhD
University of Arizona
Professor, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
Dr. Ghosh and his lab have recently constructed a new family of discrete supramolecules comprising designed peptides (coiled-coils) non-covalently assembled upon cognate peptides fused to a dendrimer core. These novel structures are being utilized for the multivalent display of proteins for protein inhibition and in the construction of novel biomaterials. The team is pursuing new approaches for labeling Quantum Dots with peptides to provide a means to image receptors on living cells.e to edit.
Professor, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
Dr. Ghosh and his lab have recently constructed a new family of discrete supramolecules comprising designed peptides (coiled-coils) non-covalently assembled upon cognate peptides fused to a dendrimer core. These novel structures are being utilized for the multivalent display of proteins for protein inhibition and in the construction of novel biomaterials. The team is pursuing new approaches for labeling Quantum Dots with peptides to provide a means to image receptors on living cells.e to edit.