Illuminating the Biochemical Activity Architecture of the Cell

Jin Zhang

Professor

Department of Pharmacology

Director of the Bio-optical Probe Advancement Center (BioPAC), and member of the Moores Cancer Center 

University of California, San Diego


Seminar Information

Seminar Date
May 11, 2018 - 2:00 PM

Location
The FUNG Auditorium - PFBH 1st Floor


Abstract

The complexity and specificity of many forms of signal transduction are widely suspected to require spatial microcompartmentation and dynamic modulation of the activities of signaling molecules, such as protein kinases, phosphatases and second messengers. We have developed a series of fluorescent biosensors to probe the compartmentalized signaling activities. In this talk, I will present studies where we combined genetically encoded fluorescent biosensors, superresolution imaging, mathematic modeling and targeted biochemical perturbations to probe the biochemical activity architecture of the cell. 

Speaker Bio

Jin Zhang attended Tsinghua University for her undergraduate studies, and pursued her graduate studies in Chemistry at the U. Chicago.  After completing her postdoctoral work at the U. California, San Diego, she joined the faculty of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2003. She was promoted to Professor of Pharmacology, Neuroscience and Oncology in 2013. In 2015 she moved back to University of California, San Diego and is currently a Professor of Pharmacology, Director of the Bio-optical Probe Advancement Center (BioPAC), and member of the Moores Cancer Center at UCSD. She is also a faculty affiliate in Departments of Bioengineering and Chemistry & Biochemistry at UCSD. Research in her lab focuses on developing enabling technologies to probe the active molecules in their native environment and characterizing how these active molecules change in diseases including cancer. Professor Zhang is a recipient of the American Heart Association National Scientist Development Award (2005), the Biophysical Society Margaret Oakley Dayhoff Award (2009), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director’s Pioneer Award (2009), the John J. Abel Award in Pharmacology from American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET) (2012), the Pfizer Award in Enzyme Chemistry from American Chemical Society (2012), and National Institute of Cancer Outstanding Investigator Award (2015). She was elected as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2014. She serves on the editorial advisory board of Cell Chemical Biology and is the past-chair of Molecular Pharmacology Division of ASPET.