Berkeley's Cancer Research Lab, in close collaboration with the Cancer Research Institute, highlights June as Cancer Immunotherapy Month. "As we appreciate these events during this month, it is remarkable to reflect on how the cancer immunotherapy revolution had its roots in basic science done here in the CRL at Berkeley."
Department News
Below are articles from various sources about members of MCB and their research.
MCB Professor Michael Rape has received a 2016 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists. He is recognized for his "for his fundamental discoveries related to ubiquitylation." The award comes with $250,000 in unrestricted funds, the largest award for early-career scientists in the U.S.
This $1.24 million award will be split among MCB Professor Jennifer Doudna, and her collaborator, Emmanuelle Charpentier of the Max Planck Institute of Infection Biology in Germany and Umeå University in Sweden, as well as Feng Zhang of MIT. They were awarded “for the development of CRISPR/Cas9 as a breakthrough genome editing platform that promises to revolutionize biomedical research and disease treatment.”
MCB Professor Randy Schekman received the the 2016 Fiat Lux Faculty Award from the Cal Alumni Association. Thanks Dr. Schekman for your dedication not only to science but to Berkeley -- Go Bears!
Read California Sunday Magazine's feature on MCB Associate Professor Diana Bautista. As it says, Bautista "is one of a small but growing number of researchers in the United States trying to decode the molecular secrets of itchiness." Reader beware -- content may make you feel a little itchy yourself!
"From DNA to Diversity" highlights several MCB researchers -- from Shion Lim, a graduate student in Professor Susan Marqusee’s lab, to Jacques Bothma, a postdoctoral fellow researching animal development in Professor Hernan Garcia’s lab -- there's a lot going on!
Thanks to Nicole Haloupek, who wrote this fantastic article for the Berkeley Science Review, and who is also a graduate student in Professor Eva Nogales's lab.
MCB Professor Jennifer Doudna is the recipient of the 2016 Dickson Prize in Medicine from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. This prize is the Pitt School of Medicine’s most prestigious annual award.
UC Berkeley researchers, led by MCB and Chemistry Professor Christopher Chang, have now clarified the critical role that copper plays in nutrition: It helps move fat out of fat cells – called adipocytes – and into the blood stream for use as energy. That being said, we still don't recommend eating pennies.
Assistant Professor Gloria Brar has been named a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences, and Assistant Professor Dirk Hockemeyer has been named a Pew-Stewart Scholar for Cancer Research by the Pew Charitable Trusts. There are only 22 biomedical scholars, and 5 cancer scholars named in the nation per year.
Professor Emeritus of Neurobiology Mu-Ming Poo has been awarded the prestigious 2016 Gruber Neuroscience Prize for his pioneering and inspiring work on synaptic plasticity. Much of this work was done at UC Berkeley.