Scholarship and Biography

The balance of protein folding and degradation is one of the most fundamental activities of the cell, and is a critical point of intervention in cancer, metabolic, and aging diseases. Molecular chaperones are the central players that regulate the cell's repertoire of folded proteins, and as a consequence chaperones influence virtually every cellular process under both healthy and disease conditions. Despite their central influence, the functional mechanisms of many chaperones are poorly understood. Work in my lab is focused on revealing these mechanisms.

Honors

High honors in physics
University of California, Berkeley (United States, Berkeley) - UCB, 2001
Burroughs-Wellcome Predoctoral Training Fellowship
Burroughs Wellcome Fund (United States, Durham) - BWF, 2004
Training Fellowship
Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation (United States, New York), 2009
Member of Protein Folding Consortium
National Science Foundation (United States, Arlington) - NSF, 2013
Dean of Arts and Sciences Mentoring Award
Brandeis University (United States, Waltham), 2020

Organizational Affiliations

Associate Professor of Biochemistry, Department of Biochemistry, Brandeis University

Affiliated Faculty, Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center, Brandeis University

Education

Johns Hopkins University
Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley
B.S.