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Susan Marqusee

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Susan Marqusee
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCornell University, Stanford University
AwardsBeckman Young Investigators Award,[1]
Scientific career
FieldsBiochemistry
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Berkeley

Susan Marqusee is the Eveland Warren Endowed Chair Professor of Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Berkeley campus director of the California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences. Her research concerns the structure and dynamics of protein molecules. She received her A.B. in Physics and Chemistry from Cornell University in 1982, and her Ph.D. (Biochemistry) and M.D. degrees from Stanford University in 1990, where she trained with Robert Baldwin on the intrinsic helical properties of amino acids in model peptides.[2]

She was one of the 1995 winners of the Beckman Young Investigators Award,[1] the 1996–1997 winner of the Margaret Oakley Dayhoff Award, and the 2012 winner of the William C. Rose Award. In 2016 she was elected to the National Academy of Sciences.[3] Her recent research concerns protein energetics, folding and turnover as altered by protein ubiquitylation.[4]

As of June, 2023, she is serving as an assistant director at the National Science Foundation, leading the Directorate for Biological Sciences.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Susan Marqusee". Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  2. ^ "Susan Marqusee". National Academy of Sciences.
  3. ^ National Academy of Sciences Members and Foreign Associates Elected, News from the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Sciences, May 3, 2016, retrieved 2016-05-14.
  4. ^ Carroll, Emma C.; Greene, Eric R.; Martin, Andreas; Marqusee, Susan (August 2020). "Site-specific ubiquitination affects protein energetics and proteasomal degradation". Nature Chemical Biology. 16 (8): 866–875. doi:10.1038/s41589-020-0556-3. ISSN 1552-4469. PMC 8513624. PMID 32483380.
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