内容简介:
【简介】 Faculty:
Robert L. Baldwin Emeritus, D.Phil., Oxford, 1954. Professor of Biochemistry Emeritus. Laboratory closed. Rearch interests: (1)analysis of the mechanism of protein folding and (2)the mechanism of alpha-helix formation by peptides.
Paul Berg Emeritus, Ph.D., Western Reserve, 1952. Department of Biochemistry Cahill Professor in Cancer Research Emeritus, and Director of the Beckman Center.
Patrick O. Brown Ph.D., 1980, M.D., 1982, Chicago. Professor of Biochemistry. Retroviral replication: To multiply, a retrovirus needs to insert a copy of its genome into the host cell chromosome. Genetic and biochemical approaches are used to investigate the mechanism and regulation of this process. Genomic analysis: Novel methods for mapping and characterizing genes in complex genomes are being developed and applied.
Douglas L. Brutlag Ph.D., Stanford, 1972. Professor of Biochemistry. The group's primary research objective is functional genomics, structural genomics and bioinformatics.
Gilbert Chu Ph.D., M.I.T., 1973; M.D., Harvard, 1980. Professor of Medicine (Oncology); Professor of Biochemistry. DNA repair, cancer biology, and immunology.
Ronald W. Davis Ph.D., Caltech, 1970. Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics; Director, Stanford Genome Technology Center.
James E. Ferrell, Jr. Professor; Ph.D., 1984, M.D., 1986, Stanford. Cell signaling and cell cycle regulation.
Pehr. A. B. Harbury Ph.D., Harvard, 1994. Assistant Professor of Biochemistry. Structural determinants of protein folding, design and small molecule recognition.
Daniel Herschlag Ph.D., Brandeis, 1988. Professor of Biochemistry. The general goal of their research is to understand the fundamental properties and behavior of biological macromolecules.
David S. Hogness Ph.D., Caltech, 1952. Munzer Professor of Developmental Biology and Biochemistry, emeritus. Molecular genetics and biochemical analyses of Drosophila development: genetic regulatory networks controlling the larva-to-fly metamorphosis and their activation by the steroid hormone ecdysone via its nuclear receptor.
Dale Kaiser Ph.D., Caltech, 1955. Professor of Biochemistry and Developmental Biology. Regulation of multicellular development.
Arthur Kornberg Emeritus, M.D., Rochester, 1941. Merner Professor of Medical Science, Department of Biochemistry. Inorganic polyphosphate (poly P) is a linear polymer of many tens or hundreds of orthophosphate (P?) residues linked by high energy, phosphoanhydride bonds.
Mark A. Krasnow Ph.D., 1983, M.D., 1985, Chicago. Professor of Biochemistry and investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Genetic, genomic, cellular, and biochemical analysis of epithelial morphogenesis, using the Drosophila tracheal (respiratory) system and mouse lung as models.
I. Robert Lehman Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1954. Hume Professor in the School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry. DNA replication in eukaryotes.
Suzanne R. Pfeffer Ph.D., U.C. California, San Francisco, 1983. Professor and Chairman of Biochemistry. Biochemistry of intracellular transport.
James A. Spudich Ph.D., Stanford, 1968. Professor of Biochemistry; Professor of Developmental Biology. Biochemical, molecular genetic, and structural studies of actin, myosin, and associated regulatory proteins from eukaryotic cells.
Aaron F. Straight Ph. D., U.C. San Francisco, 1998. Assistant Professor of Biochemistry. The laboratory studies the structure and biology of chromosomes and the mechanisms of chromosome segregation during mitosis.
Julie Theriot Ph. D., U.C. San Francisco, 1993, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry. Cell biology of host-pathogen interactions.
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