精品国产一区二区桃色

Award

Microbiology Society names 2025 award winners

ASBMB Today Staff
Jan. 27, 2025

Nikea Pittman, Chelsey Spriggs and Cesar de la Fuente are among the scientists who are receiving 2025 awards from the Microbiology Society. They will be honored and give prize lectures at the MicroSoc’s annual conference in Liverpool, England, this spring. Each recipient will receive an honorarium of 1,000 euros.
 

portrait of Nikea Pittman
Nikea Pittmann
portrait of Chelsey Spriggs
Chelsey Spriggs
portrait of Cesar de la Fuente
Cesar de la Fuente

Pittman is a teaching assistant professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her collects evidence to identify best practices in STEM higher education. Pittman has won many honors including the Diversity Award from the UNC Office of the Provost and a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Postdoctoral Diversity Enrichment Program award. She completed her Ph.D. at the University of Florida and a postdoctoral fellowship at UNC.

Pittman won the MicroSoc’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Prize collectively with other Black Microbiologists Association board members; she is the BMA’s secretary.

Spriggs is a research assistant professor in the Life Sciences Institute at the University of Michigan. Her explores the mechanisms of oncogenic virus entry.  She is an inaugural scholar in the 精品国产一区二区桃色 Maximizing Opportunities for Scientific and Academic Independent Careers, or MOSAIC, program. Spriggs is also a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Postdoctoral Enrichment Program fellow and a recipient of the U-M Office of Health Equity and Inclusion Faculty Diversity Fund Award. Spriggs earned her Ph.D. at Northwestern University studying how human papillomavirus infection leads to tumorigenesis and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the U-M.

Spriggs won the MicroSoc’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Prize collectively with other Black Microbiologists Association board members. She is a BMA co-founder and works to ensure the needs of the membership are met, according to a press release.

de la Fuente is a presidential associate professor of chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. His develops computational methods to mine the world’s biological information to identify new antimicrobial compounds, and he has pioneered the emerging field of artificial intelligence–driven antibiotic discovery. de la Fuente has won many awards including the Miklos Bondanszky Award, the Early Career Basic Research award from the American Society of Microbiology and the Princess of Girona Prize. He is also a member of the Royal Academy of Pharmacology, a National Academy of Medicine Emerging Leaders in Health and Medicine Scholar and an American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering fellow.

de la Fuente won the MicroSoc’s Fleming Prize, which honors an early career researcher who has achieved an outstanding research record. This prize is named for Sir Alexander Fleming, founder and the first president of the MicroSoc.

On receiving the award, de la Fuente said, in part, “Today, as we face a growing crisis of antibiotic resistance, I am reminded of the indispensable role antibiotics play in safeguarding global health. It is especially meaningful to have our AI-driven approach to antibiotic discovery recognized, despite the initial scepticism that machines could transform the future of antibiotics.” 
 

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
ASBMB Today Staff

This article was written by a member or members of the ASBMB Today staff.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease
Profile

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease

Oct. 30, 2025

MOSAIC scholar Cassandra Clift uses mass spectrometry and multiomics to study cardiovascular calcification and collagen dysregulation, bridging her background in bioengineering and biology to investigate extracellular vesicles and heart disease.

Learning, leading and lifting others
Profile

Learning, leading and lifting others

Oct. 23, 2025

Tigist Tamir鈥檚 journey from aspiring astronaut in Ethiopia to cancer researcher at the University of North Carolina highlights the power of mentorship, persistence and curiosity in shaping a scientific career focused on discovery and equity.

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors
News

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors

Oct. 20, 2025

Recent Nobel, MacArthur and Kimberly Prize honorees highlight the power of biochemistry and molecular biology to drive discovery, including immune tolerance, vaccine design and metabolic disease, and to advance medicine and improve human health.

Subramanian receives electron microscopy honor
Member News

Subramanian receives electron microscopy honor

Oct. 13, 2025

He delivered remarks at the International Conference on Electron Microscopy in Bangalore, India.

Bioart for fall: From order to disorder
Art

Bioart for fall: From order to disorder

Oct. 7, 2025

The cover of the fall issue of ASBMB Today was created by ASBMB member, Soutick Saha, a bioinformatics developer at Wolfram Alpha LLC.

Doudna wins Priestley Medal
Member News

Doudna wins Priestley Medal

Oct. 6, 2025

She will receive a $20,000 research grant and will formally accept the honor at the ACS Spring 2026 conference.