Home » Uncategorized » We bid you adieu, Holly Vickery!

We bid you adieu, Holly Vickery!

David Lab researcher Holly Vickery is off to graduate school, and the David Lab wishes her farewell. Holly worked on multiple projects as a research scientist in the David Lab. One project was focused on measuring the cellular repair efficiency of MutY variants, while another project revolved around optimizing a purification technique of MUTYH for higher yields and purity. Holly is moving on to graduate school as part of the Chemistry and Chemical Biology Program at the University of California San Francisco. We’ll miss you here at the David Lab, Holly, but we’re glad to see you move forward. Good luck at UCSF!

[slideshow_deploy id=’936′]

 

 

 

RSS Science Daily News

  • Chemists produce new-to-nature enzyme containing boron May 8, 2024
    Chemists created an enzyme with boronic acid at its reactive center. This approach can produce more selective reactions with boron, and allows the use of directed evolution to improve its catalytic power.
  • 'Wraparound' implants represent new approach to treating spinal cord injuries May 8, 2024
    A tiny, flexible electronic device that wraps around the spinal cord could represent a new approach to the treatment of spinal injuries, which can cause profound disability and paralysis. A team of engineers, neuroscientists and surgeons developed the devices and used them to record the nerve signals going back and forth between the brain and […]
  • Heavy snowfall and rain may contribute to some earthquakes May 8, 2024
    Episodes of heavy snowfall and rain likely contributed to a swarm of earthquakes over the past several years in northern Japan, researchers find. Their study shows climate conditions could initiate some earthquakes.
  • Possible atmosphere surrounding rocky exoplanet May 8, 2024
    Researchers may have detected atmospheric gases surrounding 55 Cancri e, a hot rocky exoplanet 41 light-years from Earth. This is the best evidence to date for the existence of any rocky planet atmosphere outside our solar system.
  • Rock steady: Study reveals new mechanism to explain how continents stabilized May 8, 2024
    Ancient, expansive tracts of continental crust called cratons have helped keep Earth's continents stable for billions of years, even as landmasses shift, mountains rise and oceans form. A new mechanism may explain how the cratons formed some 3 billion years ago, an enduring question in the study of Earth's history.

Contact:

Dr. Sheila S. David
ssdavid@ucdavis.edu
(530)-752-4280

Department of Chemistry
One Shields Ave.
Davis, CA 95616