精品国产一区二区桃色

Member News

Collins honored by Sigma Xi; Marnett steps down as dean

ASBMB Today Staff
Nov. 29, 2021

Collins receives innovation award from Sigma Xi

, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is also affiliated with the Wyss Institute and the Broad Institute, has received the 2021 Walston Chubb Award for Innovation from the scientific research honor society Sigma Xi. The award recognizes Collins' work in synthetic biology, which has led to new diagnostic and therapeutic products including a novel antibiotic.

James Collins

Collins' lab at MIT studies synthetic biology and systems biology, applying large-scale computational techniques to come up with novel antibiotics and other tools. In recent years, his lab has published on synergistic drugs to treat COVID-19, using CRISPR-based biosensors to detect pathogens including malaria and SARS-CoV-2, and applying deep learning to such problems as dermatological diagnoses based on images and identifying synergistic drug combinations.

Some of the lab’s most applauded work involves overcoming antibiotic resistance. They have investigated ways to use complementary antibiotics, some dependent on metabolic activity and others independent, to kill bacteria without causing harm to human cells. In 2020, with colleague Regina Barzilay’s team, they published a neural network–based study that surveyed thousands of compounds and identified one, a c-Jun N-terminal kinase inhibitor called halicin, that could slow the growth of numerous bacteria, including some that can resist other antibiotics.

Collins earned his doctorate in medical engineering at the University of Oxford, where he was a Rhodes scholar. He then joined the faculty at Boston University, where he remained until he moved to MIT in 2014. Among his many honors are a MacArthur fellowship, a National Institutes of Health director’s pioneer award, and a Sanofi–Institut Pasteur award. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Medicine, the National Academy of Inventors and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Sigma Xi is a chapter-based organization of about 60,000 members from across the sciences and engineering. Founded in 1886, it offers several annual awards and includes an honorific group of fellows.

Marnett to step down as Vanderbilt dean

Lawrence Marnett, the dean of Vanderbilt University's school of basic medical sciences, has announced that he will step down from that role on June 30, 2022.

Lawrence Marnett

Marnett has led the school since 2016, when the university separated from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. As dean, he led the creation of the school of basic medical sciences in 2016, aiming to give a new home to basic science departments including biochemistry, cell and developmental biology, molecular physiology and biophysics, and pharmacology.

In a on the university’s website, Cybele Raver, provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs at Vanderbilt, credited Marnett with "put(ting) in place the infrastructure and investments to clear the way for truly transformative collaboration and breakthroughs in the biomedical sciences."

Marnett earned his Ph.D. at Duke University and conducted postdoctoral research at the Karolinska Institute and Wayne State University. He was a professor at Wayne State for 14 years before joining the faculty at Vanderbilt in 1989. Since then, he has helped to launch or lead numerous other groups and centers on the campus; he served as director of basic research at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center for five years, directed the Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology and served as associate vice chancellor for research and senior associate dean for biomedical sciences at the medical center.

After stepping down as dean, Marnett plans to focus on his cancer research. , which has trained nearly 100 doctoral students and postdocs, studies the enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 and how its activity contributes to cancer and inflammation. They also investigate how normal metabolism contributes to DNA damage and how cells respond to damaged proteins.

Marnett has received excellence in teaching awards from Vanderbilt, and he is a fellow of the American Chemical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Society for Redox Biology and Medicine.

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.