Category Archives: News
Center for RNA Biology Graduate Fellowship Announcement
Good morning RNA world,
On behalf of the CRB review panel, I would like to invite you all to congratulate the winners of this year competition. This year was by far the stiffest competition on record And in fact, there was an absolute tie at the top. The review panel recommended the following and I have agreed to this arrangement.
- Ian Price and Benjamin Pastore (both from Wen Tang’s lab) will share one fellowship, where the CRB will provide 50% and the
The Tang lab will provide the other 50% of the support. That way they are both recognized for their outstanding proposals.
- The “second” Fellowship goes to Paul Russell from the Kearse lab.
- The last fellowship, but certainly not the least, goes to Fawwaz Naeem from the Fredrick lab.
Congratulations to all the winners! Eagerly waiting for wonderful results coming from this support!
Finally, special thanks to the reviewers who have done a marvelous job! And endless thanks to Susan Cole for chairing the committee!
CMBP/CRB Symposium
Dear CMBP/CRB Symposium Participants,
We wanted to thank everyone for attending our Annual Symposium—it was great to see everyone in person and feel the energy in the room! The oral and poster presentations were all excellent as were the scientific and social interactions. Special thanks to all the organizers:
Betsy Foran, CMBP Program Assistant
Zack Mikesell, CRB Program Assistant
Student Organizers: Benjamin Warner
Rodrigo Muzquiz, Isobel Bowles
Makenzie Scarpitti
Thanks to all of our Poster Judges! Congrats also to our 6 poster award winners:
Gina Nostramo (Hopper)
Safiya Khurshid (Chandler)
Ian Price (Tang)
Kenzie Scarpitti (Kearse)
Isobel Bowles (Jackman)
Andrew Wilson (Ruiz)
Best wishes for a productive summer!
Karin, Jane and Juan
2020-2021 Fellows
The Center for RNA Biology would like to congratulate the following students selected for this years fellowships: Kenzie Bevins – Kearse Lab, GeunYoung Sim – Nakanishi Lab, and Olga Golubeva – Accornero Lab. Thank you to all of our outstanding applicants for applying. We are looking forward to a productive year!
Anita Hopper elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences announced the election of its new members for 2020, which include two faculty members from the College of Arts and Sciences: Clark Larsen, Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Anthropology, and Anita Hopper, Distinguished University Scholar and professor in the Department of Molecular Genetics.
“The members of the class of 2020 have excelled in laboratories and lecture halls, they have amazed on concert stages and in surgical suites, and they have led in board rooms and courtrooms,” said David W. Oxtoby, president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. “These new members are united by a place in history and by an opportunity to shape the future through the academy’s work to advance the public good.”
Larsen is a biological anthropologist whose research focuses on the history of the human condition viewed from the perspective of health, quality of life, adaptation and lifestyle over the last 10,000 years of human evolution. His research and subsequent article based on his study of the ancient city, Çatalhöyük, recently received the 2019 Cozzarelli Prize from the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Hopper’s research focuses on utilizing yeast (S. cerevisiae) as a model to study the intracellular distribution of RNA and proteins between nucleus and cytoplasm, which is expected to shed light on fundamental cellular processes that affect many aspects of human health. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and she served as chair of the Department of Molecular Genetics from 2006 to 2014.
Larsen and Hopper are joined by 274 other artists, scholars and scientists inducted this year into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Other notable additions include singer, songwriter and activist Joan C. Baez, University of Washington President Ana Mari Cauce, lawyer and former Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. and independent filmmaker Richard Linklater.
Larsen and Hopper will be inducted, along with the rest of this year’s class, at a ceremony in October in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and join the academy members who came before them, including Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Robert Frost, Martin Luther King, Jr., Antonin Scalia, Toni Morrison and Michael Bloomberg.
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2016-2017 Fellowship Award Winners
The Center for RNA Biology would like to congratulate the following students selected for this years fellowships: Jackson Trotman– Schoenberg Lab, Anne Witzky– Ibba Lab, Sarah Choudury– Slotkin Lab, and Gabriel Silver d’Almeida– Alfonzo Lab. Thank you to all of our outstanding applicants for applying. We are looking forward to a productive year!
2015-2016 Center for RNA Biology Fellowship Awards
The Center for RNA Biology would like to congratulate the following students selected for this years fellowships: Blythe Moreland– Bundschuh Lab, Kiel Tietz– Amacher Lab, and Danny Dayeh– Nakanishi Lab. Thank you to all of our outstanding applicants for applying. We are looking forward to a productive year!
2014-2015 Center for RNA Biology Fellowship Awards
The Center for RNA Biology would like to congratulate the following students selected for this years fellowships: Bradley Howard– Musier-Forsyth Lab, Kyle Mohler– Ibba Lab and Katie Andersen– Alfonzo Lab. Thank you to all of our outstanding applicants for applying. We are looking forward to a productive year!
Pioneer RNA Researcher to Receive RNA Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award
Pioneer RNA Researcher to Receive RNA Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Anita Hopper
A leader in RNA research for four decades, Anita Hopper, professor and former chair, Department of Molecular Genetics, has worked to understand tRNA biology in the budding yeast model system.
She and her research teams have made some startling, paradigm-shifting discoveries along the way. In the 1970’s, Hopper’s lab reported isolation of the first eukaryotic mutants defective in tRNA biogenesis, and later identified numerous gene products involved in tRNA nuclear export and biogenesis.
Hopper’s use of a broad array of the tools of genetics and molecular biology, along with visualization techniques, allowed her to see that yeast tRNAs are aminoacylated while in the nucleus — a key step in regulating their export to the cytoplasm — and the paradigm-shifting tRNA retrograde pathway by which both yeast and vertebrate cells trigger cytoplasmic tRNAs to accumulate in the nucleus upon nutrient stress or tRNA damage.
This helped set the stage for a better understanding of the role RNA — the most ancient form of nucleic acid — plays in cell development. Today, RNA is a powerful tool used by biologists, mathematicians, physicists, chemists and medical and agricultural researchers to answer important, fundamental questions.
In May, Hopper will receive the ultimate professional tribute to the impact she has had on that field — the RNA Society’s 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award — recognizing “outstanding contributions to the RNA and scientific communities.”
“I am extremely honored and humbled by this prestigious recognition by the RNA Society — an international group of more than 1,000 members dedicated to fostering research and education in the RNA sciences,” Hopper said.
Currently, Hopper’s lab investigates the interactions of tRNA and proteins between the nucleus and cytoplasm in cells, using genome-wide sequencing to uncover mechanisms of tRNA intron turnover and possible alternative tRNA nuclear export pathways.
Ohio State’s Center for RNA Biology Director Dan Schoenberg, said, “Anita is a leader in applying genetics to RNA biology, and in doing so made groundbreaking studies on transfer RNAs (tRNAs). Of her many discoveries perhaps the most exciting is that of retrograde tRNA transport, where in stressed cells tRNAs move from the cytoplasm to the nucleus.
“She also is one of the most active members and supporters of the Center for RNA Biology, where she participates in many of our educational initiatives and plays a leadership role as a member of the RNA Steering Committee.”
Hopper is not known just for her research — although that would be enough — she is celebrated as an exemplary role model, mentor and cheerleader for colleagues, especially junior scientists.
In the eight years that Anita Hopper chaired the Department of Molecular Genetics — she stepped down in September 2014 — she encouraged, inspired and created a supportive atmosphere that attracted and retained some of the country’s top researchers.
Hopper has received many recognitions for her outstanding contributions to science and education; in 2008, she was elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences; in 2009, she received the RNA Society’s Lifetime Service Award; and in 2012, the Ohio State University Distinguished Scholar award.
And, of course, there was Anitafest.
In June 2014, more than 300 noted RNA researchers from around the world — as far away as India and Poland — came together to honor Hopper at Anitafest.
These colleagues, collaborators and former students gave scientific presentations and shared Anita-stories:
“Her impact goes way beyond her lab,” one colleague said. “I didn’t work with Anita, but she helped me figure out how to be a scientist. Her enthusiasm and energy played a big role.”
—Sandi Rutkowski
Anita Hopper: RNA Society Lifetime Achievement Award
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to announce that Anita Hopper has been awarded the RNA Society’s 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award.
Dr. Hopper is professor and recent chair of the Department of Molecular Genetics at Ohio State University in Columbus. For the past 40 years she has worked to understand tRNA biology in the budding yeast model system. In the 1970’s her lab reported isolation of the first eukaryotic mutants defective in tRNA biogenesis, and later identified numerous gene products involved in tRNA nuclear export and biogenesis. Dr. Hopper has employed a broad array of genetic, molecular biology and visualization techniques to show, among other things, that yeast tRNAs are aminoacylated while in the nucleus–a key step in regulating their export to the cytoplasm–and the paradigm-shifting tRNA retrograde pathway by which both yeast and vertebrate cells trigger cytoplasmic tRNAs to accumulate in the nucleus upon nutrient stress or tRNA damage. Most recently she has employed genome-wide sequencing to uncover the mechanism of tRNA intron turnover and possible alternative tRNA nuclear export pathways. She has been a leader in her discipline and a role model for junior scientists. Anita was awarded the Society’s lifetime service award in 2009 for her many years of service as board member, president, committee member and conference chair. We are now pleased to add the achievement award to her list of honors.
We hope you will join us in congratulating her, as well as joining us at RNA 2015 in Madison to help us celebrate Dr. Hopper’s lifetime of achievements.
Sincerely,
Sarah Woodson, President
James McSwiggen, CEO
and the RNA Society Board