Newsletter No. 1, Vol. 1 —12.09.2014 ontact information.
Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Speaker: Zena Werb. Abstract will be announced. See overview of the IO seminars here. Doctorate on breast cancer IO associate rina Torin defended Friday June 20th her PhD thesis ’’The Role of the Axl Receptor Tyrosine Kinase in reast ancer”. Tiron's doctoral work is mainly focused on Axl, a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) that proves to be.
Zena Werb, PhD received her BSc in Biochemistry from the University of Toronto, and her PhD in Cell Biology from Rockefeller University, New York. After post-doctoral studies at the Strangeways Research Laboratory in Cambridge England, she was recruited to the UCSF faculty, where she is currently Professor and Vice-Chair of Anatomy.
Barbie Klein PhD is an assistant professor in the Department of Anatomy. She received her doctoral degree in Human Anatomy from Indiana University where she researched the integration of high-fidelity patient simulations in medical education.
ZENA WERB, PHD University of California, San Francisco. MAY 7 Atlases as roadmaps to understanding tumors. AVIV REGEV, PHD Broad Institute. MAY 5 Cell Therapy for the Treatment of T-ALL and T-NHL. JOHN F. DIPERSIO MD, PHD Washington University School of Medicine.
BS in Biological Sciences, minor in Chemistry, Stanford University (2005) MD, PhD in Biomedical Sciences (MSTP), University of California, San Francisco. Graduate Advisor: Dr. Zena Werb (2006 - 2014) Intern, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco (2014-2015) Resident, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco (2015 - 2016) Clinical Fellow.
Advisor: Zena Werb, Ph.D. Breast cancer metastasis. University of California, Los Angeles. Doctoral student Advisor: Owen Witte, MD Prostate stem cells and prostate cancer. University of California, at Davis. Undergraduate student Degree: Biological sciences, Genetics Lab Advisor: Wolf-Dietrich Heyer DNA repair in S. cerevisiae.