Category: 2019 News

2019 News

Dr. Frieden Mentioned

Dr. Carl FriedenNovember 4th, 2019 – Research by Dr. Carl Frieden appeared on the Alzforum site in the article “Can an ApoE Mutation Halt Alzheimer’s Disease?”

One of Dr. Frieden’s previous publications was also cited by the article.

Click here to view the article on the Alzform site.

To view Dr. Frieden’s publication mentioned in the article, you can click here to view it on the NIH site.

Electronic Lab Notebook Offering Launching for Research Community

This week, the Research Infrastructure Services (RIS) group – part of Washington University Information Technology – will begin piloting WashU ELN, an electronic lab notebook service powered by LabArchives. The LabArchives Electronic Lab Notebook is a cloud-based application that facilitates the creation, storage, sharing and management of research data. (more…)

Congratulations to Melanie Ernst!

Melanie ErnstMelanie Ernst has been elected chair of the 2021 Mechanisms of Membrane Transport GRS.

The GRS is a unique forum for graduate students, post-docs, and other scientists with comparable levels of experience and education to present and exchange new data and cutting edge ideas.

Congratulations Melanie!

Maxwell Zimmerman Awarded Pharmacology Prize

Maxwell ZimmermanCongratulations to Maxwell Zimmerman for being awarded the Dr. Philip Needleman Pharmacology Prize.

The award is presented annually from the Department of Developmental Biology to a graduating student demonstrating outstanding achievements it the field of Pharmacology. Maxwell is a PhD student in the Computational and Molecular Biophysics Program – he is completing his thesis research in the lab of Dr. Gregory Bowman. (more…)

Josh Rackers selected as the 2019 Ceil M. DeGutis Prize Fellow

Josh Rackers

Josh Rackers is a graduate student in Biophysics at Washington University in St. Louis. His work focuses on using the tools of applied quantum mechanics to predict the behavior and interactions of biological molecules. This work is motivated by a deeply held belief that physics holds the answers to many of biology’s most important problems. Josh obtained a bachelor’s degree in Physics and Political Science from The Ohio State University. While at Ohio State, he performed research on Positron Emission Tomography (PET) silicon-based detector design. Following graduation, Josh decided that the most immediate way to make an impact on the world was to become a teacher. He was selected for Teach For America, an organization that places top university graduates in teaching positions at poor, mostly-urban schools. He taught high school physics and chemistry in Baltimore, Maryland in what was certainly the most difficult and rewarding job of his career. He claims to have succeeded in persuading a generation of students that physics really does matter to the real world. (more…)

Congratulations to Sukrit Singh for being selected for the 2019 MilliporeSigma Fellowship in memory of Dr. Gerty Cori

Sukrit is a graduate student in the Computational and Molecular Biophysics program. He is doing his PhD thesis work in the lab of Dr. Greg Bowman. Sukrit’s thesis is focused on understanding and exploiting allostery and dynamics in cellular signaling to develop anti-cancer therapeutics. (more…)

Congratulations to Min Kyung Shinn

Congratulations to Min Kyung Shinn, whose poster at the 2019 Biophysical Society was recognized with a Student Research Achievement Award (SRAA). The SRAA Poster Competition is open to all BPS Student members who are presenting posters at the Annual Meeting. Students must register for this event when they submit their abstract in one of nine subject categories. The SRAA Poster Competition involved over 300 participants this year, a Society record. (more…)