Not exact matches
Naik received her B.S. in cell and
molecular biology from the University of Maryland and her Ph.D. in
immunology from the University of Pennsylvania - National Institutes of Health Graduate Partnership
Program.
The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health (CA42471, AI40127, AI84167, AI095634), the European Union (FP7 grant EC - FP7 - SYBILLA - 201106), the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in
Molecular Systems
Immunology and Physiology Research, the German Research Foundation (SFB 1054 TP A03), the Jane Coffins Childs Memorial Fund, the Pew Latin American Fellows
Program in the Biomedical Sciences and the Finnish Doctoral Programme in Computational Sciences FICS.
Offering
programs in Biochemistry, Biology, Biophysics, Biotechnology, Cell Biology, Computer Science, Developmental Biology, Genetics,
Immunology, Informatics, Life Sciences,
Molecular Biology, Oncology, Statistics, Structural Biology.
«By simply watching cells grow, we were able to characterize several differences between bacteria that are killed quickly and those that respond slowly to antibiotics,» said Aldridge, who serves as faculty in the
Immunology and
Molecular Microbiology
programs at the Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences at Tufts.
Education: Ph.D. from New York University's
molecular oncology and
immunology training
program; M.S. in
immunology from the University of São Paulo; M.S. and B.A. in classical piano from the Mannes College of Music
Since 2000 Head of Lymphocyte Activation Unit Division of
Immunology, Transplantation and Infectious Diseases
Program in
Immunology, Bio-Immuno-gene therapy of Cancer, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele, Milan, Italy 1998 - 1999 Research Associate Department of
Molecular Biology and Functional Genomic, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele, Milan, Italy 1993 - 1998 Postdoctoral Associate Department of Microbiology University of Minnesota, Medical School Minneapolis, MN, USA 1991 - 1992 Department of Pharmacology, New York University, New York, USA 1989 - 1991 Department of Biomedical Science and Oncology, Turin, Italy 1988 - 1989 Research Fellow Department of Biomedical Science and Oncology, Turin, Italy 1989 - 1992 Ph.D. student in
Molecular Oncology 1986 - 1988 Undergraduate student Department of Biomedical Science and Oncology, Turin, Italy
«These are very promising findings and, as the first study to demonstrate protection from Zika in the pregnancy setting, are an important development in our efforts to combat Zika virus,» said Michael Diamond, M.D., Ph.D., Professor, Departments of Medicine,
Molecular Microbiology, Pathology &
Immunology, and Associate Director, Center for Human
Immunology and Immunotherapy
Program at Washington University School of Medicine, and a lead author on the Cell paper.
Other funding was from the Cancer Research Institute, the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in
Molecular Systems,
Immunology and Physiology Research
program, the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation (DRG -2069-11), and the National Science Foundation.
He is also an associate member of the Harvard Department of
Molecular and Cellular Biology, and a member of the Graduate
Programs in Biophysics and
Immunology at Harvard University.
Littman is the Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Professor of
Molecular Immunology, a professor of pathology and microbiology, and a faculty member in the
Molecular Pathogenesis
program in the Skirball Institute for Biomedical Research at the New York University School of Medicine in New York, NY.
The feasibility of this
program, both at the research and clinical levels, require multiple know - how (
molecular biology,
immunology, oncology, epidemiology, clinical diagnosis..)
In addition to Miller, Hoffman, and Matthias Christen, the other scientists on this project were Hemantha Kulasekara of the UW Department of
Immunology; Beat Christen of the Department of Developmental Biology at Stanford University; Bridget Kulasekara of the UW
Molecular Cell Biology
Program, and Luke Hoffman of the UW Department of Pediatrics.
Training towards the PhD degree in
immunology spans four graduate
programs - Physiology, Pharmacology / Toxicology, the new
Program in Experimental and
Molecular Medicine (PEMM), and
Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB), with the latter containing the majority of the participating faculty and students.