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Judy Bond former President of ASBMB, ASBMB's current president Toni Antalis of University of Maryland School of Medicine, Greg Wang, and ASBMB's president-elect Ann Stock of Rutgers University–Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
Judy Bond former President of ASBMB, ASBMB’s current president Toni Antalis of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Greg Wang, and ASBMB’s president-elect Ann Stock of Rutgers University–Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.

Greg Wang and Judy Bond Greg Wang with award Greg Wang and his family

Greg G. Wang, PhD, an associate professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics and joint Pharmacology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, won the 2022 ASBMB Young Investigator Award, which recognizes outstanding research contributions to biochemistry and molecular biology and contributions to the community of scientists. Wang’s lab studies how chromatin modification and epigenetic modifications contribute to gene regulation and cancer development.

ASBMB Young Investigator Award (formerly the ASBMB/Schering–Plough Research Institute Award) recognizes outstanding research contributions to biochemistry and molecular biology.

The award consists of a plaque, $5,000, transportation and expenses to present a lecture at the ASBMB annual meeting.

ASBMB names 2022 award winners

Dr. Wang will give a talk about his work at the society’s 2022 annual meeting, which was held in conjunction with the Experimental Biology conference April 2-5, 2022 in Philadelphia.

Read more on the ASBMB website: 2022 ASBMB Young Investigator Award.

He will also give his award lecture via a webinar in August 2022.