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Posted by admin- in Home -22/09/17CDC Biosafety Home. SAVE the DATE January 3. February 3, 2. 01. Atlanta, GACheck back for more information on pre conference courses and topics as they are finalized. The NIST 17 Mass Spectral Library Search Software NIST 20172014EPANIH. Guidelines for Writing Professional Email. NIH Office of Intramural Training and Education December 2010. Subject line. Provide clear, specific subject lines that. NIH Common Fund New Innovator Award Recipients. Ishan Barman, Ph. D. Johns Hopkins University. Project Title Spectroscopy Assisted MechanoChemical. The symposium is for biosafety professionals in research, public health and animal health fields, facility managers, occupational health practitioners, and laboratorians in leadership positions. Biosafety The Office of Safety, Security and Asset Management OSSAM serves CDC internally by promoting safer, healthful working practices and serves as a world. How do people use marijuana People smoke marijuana in handrolled cigarettes joints or in pipes or water pipes bongs. They also smoke it in bluntsemptied. This page has been visited times. Send comments to wsr nih. gov. Disclaimer. New Innovator Award Recipients. Bassem Al Sady, Ph. D. University of California at San Francisco. Project Title Reconstructing Dynamic Epigenetic Genome Partitioning in Single Stem Cells. Grant ID DP2 GM 1. Bassem Al Sady is from Nuernberg, Germany and received his Masters in Biochemistry from the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. Bassem earned his Ph. D. in Plant Biology from the University of California at Berkeley where he worked with Dr. Peter Quail on the primary mechanism by which the plant photoreceptor phytochrome rapidly transmits light signals to the cell nucleus. Following completion of his Ph. D., he received his postdoctoral training with Drs. Geeta Narlikar and Hiten Madhani in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics at the University of California, San Francisco UCSF. In his postdoctoral work, Bassem focused on unraveling biochemical principles of heterochromatin assembly, as well as the mechanisms of propagation of heterochromatin information along the chromosome using the fission yeast model. In 2. 01. 3, he joined the faculty in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at UCSF as Assistant Professor in Residence, where his group builds biochemical and single cell genetic tools to dissect mechanisms of the heterochromatin spreading reaction in genome partitioning and directing differentiation. Jason R. Andrews, M. D., S. M. Stanford University. Project Title Congregate Air Sampling for Population Based Detection of Tuberculosis. Grant ID DP2 AI 1. Jason Andrews is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine at Stanford University and a practicing infectious diseases physician. A graduate of Yale College, Yale School of Medicine and Harvard School of Public Health, his research focuses on developing and evaluating novel methods for diagnosis and understanding transmission dynamics of tuberculosis and tropical diseases. His work includes field sites in South Africa, Brazil and Nepal, and incorporates field and molecular epidemiology, microbiology, statistical inference, and mathematical modeling. Effie Apostolou, Ph. D. Weill Cornell Medicine. Project Title Defining the Role of Chromatin Architecture in Cell Fate Inheritance. Grant ID DP2 DA 0. Effie Apostolou is an Assistant Professor of Molecular Biology in Medicine at the Department of Medicine and the Meyer Cancer Center at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York. Her research focus is to understand the interplay between transcription factors and higher order chromatin organization in the regulation of gene expression and cell identity. She received her B. Sc. in Biology from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and her Ph. D in Molecular Biology from the National University of Athens in Greece. As a Ph. D student in Dimitris Thanos lab in Athens, Greece, she discovered novel molecular mechanisms that drive stochastic gene expression upon viral infection. For her postdoctoral studies, she joined Konrad Hochedlingers lab at the Massachussetts General Hospital and Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Boston, where she focused on dissecting epigenetic and chromatin organization changes during somatic cell reprogramming and their effect on pluripotency. Effie is also a recipient of an Edward Jr Mallinckrodt research grant and of two Tri Institutional Stem cell Initiative Grants funded by the Starr Foundation. Daniel E. Bauer, M. D., Ph. D. Harvard Medical School and Dana FarberBoston Childrens Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. Project Title High Throughput Discovery of Essential Noncoding Sequences for Erythropoiesis. Grant ID DP2 HL 1. Daniel Bauer is an assistant professor in pediatrics at Harvard Medical School and staff physician at the Dana FarberBoston Childrens Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. His research program integrates genetic, epigenetic, and functional genomic methodologies to understand the determinants of blood cell development and develop innovative therapeutic strategies for blood disorders. He received his Sc. B in Biology from Brown University and MDPh. D from the University of Pennsylvania where his graduate work in the lab of Craig Thompson focused on the role of glucose metabolism and lipid biosynthesis in the growth of normal and malignant hematopoietic cells. Following clinical training in pediatrics and pediatric hematologyoncology at Boston Childrens Hospital and Dana Farber Cancer Institute, he performed post doctoral work in Stuart Orkins lab where he identified an erythroid enhancer element of the BCL1. A gene that is a critical regulator of fetal hemoglobin level and a potential therapeutic target for the hemoglobin disorders. He is the recipient of awards from the American Society of Hematology, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, and Doris Duke Charitable, Charles H. Hood and Cooleys Anemia Foundations. Sean Bendall, Ph. D. Stanford University, School of Medicine. Project Title Origins of Human Blood Lineages in Regenerative Medicine. Grant ID DP2 EB 0. Sean is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine. Sean completed his B. Sc. in Biochemistry with a specialization in mass spectrometry based proteomics at the University of Victoria, Canada. He went onto a Ph. D. in the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Western Ontario, Canada where his thesis work focused on the identification of intrinsic and extrinsic regulators of the human embryonic stem cell state with Mick Bhatia Gilles Lajoie. Sean came to Stanford as a CIHR and Damon Runyon postdoctoral fellow with Garry Nolan where he developed new single cell proteomic technologies for analysis of the human hematopoietic immune system. Now, his lab continues to push the boundaries on single cell analysis and subcellular imaging, addressing questions in problems surounding human immunology, regenerative medicine, and stem cell biology. Parijat Bhatnagar, Ph. D. SRI International. Project Title Self Assembled Therapeutics with Spatiotemporal Resolution. Grant ID DP2 EB 0. Parijat Bhatnagar is the Program Director for Cell based Medicine in the Biosciences Division at SRI International. His research is in developing cellular therapeutics that can actively seek disease microenvironments, assess the disease burden, and synthesize proportionate amounts of therapeutic peptides upon engaging the molecular antigens on disease cells. He is also developing technologies for scaling up the manufacturing of these therapeutic cells. His post doctoral training was in T cell engineering at MD Anderson Cancer Center with a joint position at Houston Methodist Research Institute, where he developed approaches for imaging adoptively transferred T cells. He holds a Ph. D in Biomedical Engineering from Cornell University. His thesis was on microfabrication of photoactivatable biomaterials and micro electro mechanical systems. Stephen Brohawn, Ph. D. University of California, Berkeley. Project Title New Approaches to Understanding Biological Force Sensation. Grant ID DP2 GM 1. Stephen Brohawn received his B. S. in Biochemistry from the University of Delaware in 2. In 2. 01. 0, he received his Ph. D. in Biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology after conducting his thesis work in the laboratory of Thomas Schwartz where he studied the structure and function of the nuclear pore complex. He then joined Dr.