Congratulations to BCMB Graduate Student Rittik Ghosh, from the Len Mueller Group, for receiving this years Mary K. and Randolph T. Wedding Award! The Mary and Randolph T. Wedding prize is presented annually to one or two meritorious graduate students in the Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Graduate Program at the University of California, Riverside. The...
Congratulations to all of our Class of 2022 graduates! Ernie Chambers, a Biochemistry major, was recently featured in an article, copied below, by Sandra Baltazar MartÍnez on UCR News. To view the full article, please visit the UCR News site here. Ernie Chambers This biochemistry major’s mission is clear: become a medical doctor to help...
Congratulations to BCMB Graduate Student Mahamaya Biswal, from the Jikui Song lab for receiving this years Mary K. and Randolph T. Wedding Award! The Mary and Randolph T. Wedding prize is presented annually to one or two meritorious graduate students in the Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Graduate Program at the University of California, Riverside. The...
Congratulations to Timothy Tam, from Biochemistry, who has been awarded an Outstanding Teaching Assistant (OTA) Award 2021-2022 from the UCR Graduate Division! A full list of this year's recipients can be found here:
Congratulations to this year's BCH 162 Leland M. Shannon Scholarship Award Winners! Winter 2022: Krystal Adan | Elizabeth Liu | Rachel Nguyen | Sunny Trieu Spring 2022: Brian Chong | Samantha Kuong | Jason Ly | Jeff Yang The Shannon Scholarship Awards are presented to students enrolled in BCH 162 (Advanced Biochemistry Laboratory). The students...
From UCR News Article by Iqbal Pittalwala: "The study led by Sihem Cheloufi and Jernej Murn, both assistant professors in the Department of Biochemistry, shows how a protein complex, called chromatin assembly factor-1, or CAF-1, controls genome organization to maintain lineage fidelity. The report appears today in Nature Communications." Read more at the UCR News...
From the UCR News Article by Iqbal Pittalwala: "The University of California, Riverside, has received a $2.2 million grant from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health that will help researchers target critical oncogenes of the B-cell lymphoma 2, or Bcl-2, family of proteins that regulate all major mechanisms of cell death...