CITRIS Distinguished Speaker Series: Carolyn Bertozzi

  • March 19, 2007: 3:00pm - 4:00pm
  • Location: 306 Soda Hall, HP Auditorium, UC Berkeley campus

"Engineering Nano/Biological Interfaces"

Carolyn Bertozzi, UC Berkeley professor of chemistry

Monday, March 19
4:00 p.m.
306 Soda Hall, UC Berkeley campus

 

Watch talk online | View presentation (ppt)

 

Abstract:
The fields of nanoscience and biology have experience a convergence in that technologies from each field have had a major impact on the other. Biological nanostructures have served as inspiration for new synthetic materials and nanometer-scale devices have been used to probe biological systems. This presentation will focus on the development of technologies for interfacing synthetic and biological systems at the nanometer scale.

 

Biography:
Carolyn Bertozzi is the T.Z. and Irmgard Chu Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at UC Berkeley, an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Director of the Molecular Foundry, a nanoscience institute at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. She completed her undergraduate degree in Chemistry from Harvard University in 1988 and her Ph.D. in Chemistry from UC Berkeley in 1993. After completing postdoctoral work at UCSF in the field of cellular immunology, she joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 1996.

Prof. Bertozzi's research interests span the disciplines of chemistry and biology with an emphasis on studies of cell surface glycosylation pertinent to disease states. Her lab focuses on profiling changes in cell surface glycosylation associated with cancer, inflammation and bacterial infection, and exploiting this information for development of diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. In addition, her group develops nanoscale technologies for probing cell function and for medical diagnostics.

Last Updated: March 20, 2007 - 8:38am