MCB TRANSCRIPT

Science magazine’s Breakthrough of the Year for 2013 was cancer immunotherapy, which was based on work begun in the 1990s by then-MCB Professor James Allison, and the runners up included CRISPR, a new gene editing technique co-discovered in 2012 by Professor Jennifer Doudna.
Assistant Professor Diana Bautista’s work on
itching was featured in the 2014 New York
Times article Itching: More Than Skin-Deep,
and she discussed her research on tingling
sensations on the 2014 NPR Morning Edition
segment Sichuan Pepper’s Buzz May Reveal
Secrets of the Nervous System. She also recently received a Young Investigator Award from the Society for Neuroscience.
Professor Jennifer Doudna received three
prizes — the 2014 Lurie Prize in the Biomedical Sciences from the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, the 2014 Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research, and the 2015 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences — for her work on CRISPR, the new gene-editing
technique. CRISPR was also named one of the
top 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2014 by
the MIT Technology Review.
Assistant Professor Lin He received the 2014
Carcinogenesis Young Investigator Award,
which is for a recent, significant contribution to
carcinogenesis research by an investigator under
the age of 40.
Department Co-Chair and Professor Richard
Harland has been elected to the National
Academy of Sciences, one of the highest
honors given to a scientist or engineer in the
United States. He also received the Society of
Developmental Biology’s 2014 Edwin G. Conklin Medal, which is for distinguished and sustained
research in developmental biology.
Professor James Hurley received the Protein
Society’s 2014 Hans Neurath Award, which
recognizes recent contributions of unusual merit
to basic research in the field of protein science.
Professor Emerita Judith Klinman was
selected by President Barack Obama in 2014 to
receive the National Medal of Science, the
nation’s highest honor for a scientist, for her work
on enzyme catalysis.
Professor Randy Schekman has been named to the prestigious Institute of Medicine, one of the highest national honors in the fields of health and medicine. The honor was announced Oct. 20, just a little over a year since Schekman won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
In Memoriam
Professor Emeritus Howard Bern, a pioneer in understanding how hormones affect development, passed away on January 3, 2012.
Professor John Forte, a physiologist
whose work on acid-secreting cells in the
stomach pointed the way to treatments
for ulcers, passed away on November 19, 2012.
Professor Emeritus Donald Arthur
Glaser, a Nobel-prize winning physicist
who reinvented himself as a biotech
pioneer and later dove into the field of
neurobiology, passed away on February 28, 2013.
Professor Emeritus James Fristrom,
known for his significant contributions to
fruit fly genetics and development, passed away
on October 29, 2013.
Graduate student Paul Geurts, who
started at Berkeley in 2010 and was a
member of the David Bilder lab, passed away on
December 4, 2013. He was an important
member of the MCB community and has
been dearly missed.
Professor Emeritus Harold Lecar, whose
pioneering work on single ion channels
was foundational for the study of
excitable membranes, died on
February 4, 2014.
Professor Emerita Sydney Kustu, who
studied the regulation of nitrogen
metabolism in bacteria and was affiliated
with MCB for several years, passed away on
March 18, 2014 in Berkeley.
Professor Thomas C. Alber, a structural
biologist known for his striking ability to
choose important biological problems
and attack them with elegant biochemical
and structural studies, died peacefully on
March 28, 2014 in Berkeley. To honor
him, the Alber Family and the MCB
faculty have set a goal to raise $50,000
to establish a permanent lecture series
in his memory.
Donations to the
Alber Memorial Fund can be made here:
https://give.berkeley.edu/egiving/index.cfm?fund=FM8345000
Professor Emeritus Richard A. Steinhardt passed away on July 10, 2014, in Bellingham, WA at age 74. Rick received his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1966 and spent a year as a postdoctoral fellow at Cambridge University before joining the Berkeley faculty in July 1967 as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Zoology. During 1979-80 he was appointed as a Miller Professor, and in 1981 he was named an Overseas Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge. Rick was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1992. He retired June 30, 2005.
Check out all the latest MCB news here:
http://mcb.berkeley.edu/news-and-events/department-news