We are always excited to collaborate with various organizations to provide our members a great community and opportunities

We are always excited to collaborate with various organizations to provide our members a great community and opportunities

NBPA Seminar: NIH Funding Opportunities & LRP

Brought to you by: NIH Division of Biomedical Research Workforce & Division of Loan Repayment

Black history in the making: Interview Series

Brought to you by the ASBMB MAC and the NBPA

Taylor Carmon is a postdoc in the Carman Lab at Rutgers University whose current research focuses on understanding lipid metabolism and how it's regulated.

Tigist Tamir is a postdoctoral fellow at the MIT Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer. She is currently researching cellular health and homeostasis, specifically looking at oxidative stress.

Briana James is a postdoctoral fellow at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute who is currently studying asthma.

Olorunfemi Molehin is a postdoc at Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti Nigeria, whose current research focuses on diabetes and neurodegenerative diseases. He is also interested in "isolating and characterizing bioactive compounds from medicinal plants."

Lisa Eshun-Wilson is a National Science Foundation (NSF) postdoctoral scholar at the Scripps Research Institute. She is currently using cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to study different enzymes at work in the body and "reveal the 'proteolytic code' embedded in the substrates of the AAA+ inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) metalloprotease YME1L, which perform both processive degradation and site-specific cleavage.”

Natoya Peart is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania. The overall theme of her research is to answer the question: "How does RNA processing help to determine cell fate?"

Stephen Williams is a postdoctoral fellow in the Kaipparrettu Lab at Baylor College of Medicine. His research "focuses on understanding the role of metabolic reprogramming in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) metastasis and metabolic significance in the racial disparity amongst African American and Hispanic TNBC patients."