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Parker began his laboratory at the University of Arizona in 1989, and was a professor molecular and cellular biology until 2012 when he moved to be a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. [4] He is currently the Cech-Leinwand Endowed Chair of Biochemistry as well as professor in chemistry and biochemistry courses.
J. Richard McIntosh is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at the University of Colorado Boulder. [1] McIntosh first graduated from Harvard with a BA in Physics in 1961, and again with a Ph.D. in Biophysics in 1968. [1]
Karolin Luger is an Austrian-American biochemist and biophysicist known for her work with nucleosomes and discovery of the three-dimensional structure of chromatin.She is a Distinguished Professor at the University of Colorado Boulder in the Biochemistry Department.
Returning to Boulder, Cech became the first executive director of the BioFrontiers Institute, a position he held until 2020. He also taught general chemistry to freshmen. Cech is the author of The Catalyst: RNA and the Quest to Unlock Life’s Deepest Secrets, published in June 2024. [7]
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) is a method for determining the kinetics of diffusion through tissue or cells. It is capable of quantifying the two-dimensional lateral diffusion of a molecularly thin film containing fluorescently labeled probes, or to examine single cells.
Single-molecule fluorescence (or Förster) resonance energy transfer (or smFRET) is a biophysical technique used to measure distances at the 1-10 nanometer scale in single molecules, typically biomolecules. It is an application of FRET wherein a pair of donor and acceptor fluorophores are excited and detected at a single molecule level. In ...
His lab has numerous clinical collaborations. [9] Current research includes investigating the role of immune cells in decompression sickness using lung-on-a-chip devices, [ 10 ] [ 11 ] developing "bottom-up" multifunctional magnetic microrobots, [ 12 ] [ 13 ] and using acoustically responsive particles for capture and purification of disease ...
In 1996, Pace moved to University of California, Berkeley as a professor of plant and microbial biology, and molecular and cell biology for a stay of three years before being recruited to the University of Colorado, Boulder, in 1999 as a professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology (MCDB). He was named distinguished professor of ...