 Jennifer Brigham B.A. Wittenberg University brighamj at u.washington.edu
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I am developing bioorthogonal ligation methods for chemical proteomic applications. |
 Matthew Chang B.S. University of Portland changm3 at u.washington.edu
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I am developing bivalent kinase inhibitors. |
 Daniel Cunningham-Bryant B.S. University of California, Santa Cruz dancb at u.washington.edu
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I work on expanding the scope of small molecule-controlled protein switches. |
 Carrie Gower B.S. Colorado State University gowerc at u.washington.edu
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I am using proteomic methods to examine bivalent inhibitor selectivity. |
 Sanjay Hari B.S. Ohio State University hari1 at u.washington.edu
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I study inactive kinase conformations. Most of my free time is spent listening to Rush and reading about liberty.
AHA Graduate Fellowship (2011-2013) |
 Arinjay Mitra B.S. St. Stephen's College, Delhi akmitra at u.washington.edu
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I develop inhibitors for the RNase/kinase IRE1. |
 Amy Register B.S. University of California, Berkeley acreg at u.washington.edu
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I study how small molecule inhibitors affect the global conformations of Src-family kinases. In my spare time, I enjoy running, swimming, listening to live music, and reading depressing literature.
NIH T32 Training Grant (2012-2014) |
 Jack Rose MPhil Cambridge University B.S. Stanford University jackrose at u.washington.edu
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I'm developing a small molecule controllable construct of SOS, a guanine exchange factor (GEF) which activates RAS. I'm particularly interested systems and network biology, and I hope to borrow from these disciplines in analyzing how our chemical biology tools mess up cells.
Outside of lab, I enjoy being a huge alcohol nerd, running, and all obligatory Seattle outdoor activities. I'm an MD/PhD trainee, so I've also been known to do mediciney stuff.
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 Bridget Trevillian B.S. Xavier University btrev at u.washington.edu
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I am working on next-generation small molecule-controlled protein switches. |