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Channing J. Der Annual Career Symposium

May 1 @ 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm

2024_05_01 CHANNING J. DER CAREER SYMPOSIUM flyer

Please save the date for the Channing J. Der Annual Career Symposium featuring career-focused talks representing different career paths. Registration required.

This event is an opportunity for graduate and postdoctoral fellows to listen to presentations and ask questions.

This will be offered as a hybrid event. Lunch will be provided for in-person attendees. Please contact the CRTEC team at lccctraining@unc.edu with any questions.

Speakers

Academic

Dr. Tikvah Hayes, Assistant Professor, UCSF

Bio: Dr. Tiki Hayes completed her undergraduate degrees at the University of California, San Diego, double majoring in animal physiology & neuroscience and history. She performed undergraduate research under the direction of Dr. Lutz Tautz in the laboratory of Dr. Tomas Mustelin at the Burnham Institute. She supported efforts to identify select inhibitors of the cell cycle phosphatase VHR. Before applying to graduate school, Dr. Hayes was a technician at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, where she studied duplication mediated DNA damage response in yeast with Dr. Christopher Putnam in the laboratory of Dr. Richard Kolodner. Dr. Hayes received her Ph.D. in Genetics and Molecular Biology from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where she studied the effects of ERK inhibition in KRAS-mutant pancreatic cancer under the guidance of Dr. Channing J. Der. Dr. Hayes completed her postdoctoral training in the laboratory of Dr. Matthew Meyerson at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Broad Institute. She leveraged high-throughput genetic screening approaches to 1) understand mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapies and 2) identify variants of unknown significance. Dr. Hayes is currently an assistant professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, in the department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology. The Hayes lab applies high-throughput genetic screening, novel assay development, molecular biology, and inhibitor sensitivity/resistance analyses to understand the genetic mechanisms underlying human cancers and resistance to targeted therapies.

Biotech

Dr. Sujata Chakraborty, Senior Scientist I, Revolution Medicines

Bio: I am a Senior Scientist at the clinical-stage precision oncology company, Revolution Medicines (RevMed). I received my Ph.D. in Chemistry at the University of Washington, Seattle, in Dr. Dustin J. Maly’s lab where I studied allosteric regulation of protein kinases and ways of designing highly selective and potent kinase inhibitors. As a Postdoc in Dr. Alan Saghatelian’s lab at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, I developed tools to study transient protein-protein interactions. I have always been passionate about translational research that can have immediate and significant effects on patients’ lives. Therefore in 2021, I joined RevMed as a Scientist in the Department of Cancer Biology. RevMed, is focused on developing novel targeted therapies to inhibit elusive frontier targets within notorious growth and survival pathways, with particular emphasis on RAS and associated signaling pathways. The company has several drugs in its portfolio in Phase I-II clinical trials. At RevMed, I work on multiple developmental as well as exploratory projects. As a Scientist, I get to develop and deploy tools and assays vital to drug development and validation of new Cancer Targets.

Big Pharma

Dr. Matthew Calabrese, Senior Director of Structural and Molecular Sciences, Pfizer

Bio: Following an undergraduate degree in Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Connecticut, Matt completed a PhD in the department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale.  He then transitioned to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital as a Damon Runyon postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Dr. Brenda Schulman studying the structure and mechanism of E3 ubiquitin ligases.  After his postdoc (in 2011), Matt took a position as a Senior Scientist in Structural Biology at Pfizer providing experimental (crystallographic) support for several small molecule drug discovery programs.  Matt then progressed to Principal Scientist and Senior Principal Scientist roles within the same group before moving into a supervisory role as a lab head leading a small team.  In 2020, Matt took over as Senior Director and Head of Structural and Molecular Sciences, a department that provides structural biology, biophysics, and biochemistry support for Pfizer’s East Coast small molecule portfolio and vaccines.  Key areas of focus for the group include structure-based drug design (xray and CryoEM), fragment screening, target engagement, and mechanism of action studies as well as large molecule (antigen) design.

Flyer pdf

Details

Date:
May 1
Time:
1:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Organizer

CRTEC team
Email
lccctraining@unc.edu