UC Davis Biological Sciences Newsletter - Fall 1997

Keck Foundation Award Establishes New Structural Biology Center

A major award from the W. M. Keck Foundation in Los Angeles to the Division of Biological Sciences and Department of Chemistry has established a new center at UC Davis for research on structural biology. The $850,000 award will help equip laboratory suites in the Chemistry Annex for X-ray crystallography--a method that produces high-resolution images of protein structure--and establish a new protein expression laboratory in Briggs Hall. The facilities, which include faculty laboratory space in each building, collectively will be named the W. M. Keck Center for Structural Biology.

"Structural biology is a critical and exciting field because it helps scientists understand all biological processes more fully," says Mark McNamee, dean of the division.

"For example, the field is shedding light on apoptosis (programmed cell death), DNA recombination and repair, and the function of proteins involved in the cell cycle. The Keck award is helping us give the structural biology program a strong start, and substantially augments existing strengths in biological sciences and chemistry at UC Davis."

Reflecting strong support of the field, the campus during the past two years recruited three scientists with expertise in X-ray crystallography. Andrew Fisher, new to the chemistry department in 1996, quickly established a vigorous research program that includes three graduate students and two undergraduates. Enoch Baldwin and David Wilson, who joined the division's Section of Molecular and Cellular Biology this past July, are establishing their research programs this year, and will begin to train undergraduates and graduate students.

Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef notes, "The Keck award certainly honors the UC Davis commitment to students, but it also recognizes the scholarly potential of the junior faculty recruited for the structural biology program. The grant will allow us to acquire equipment that opens up significant research opportunities and strengthens our sciences' curriculum."

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UC Davis Biological Sciences Newsletter - Fall 1997