Attachment 10C Fellowship Applicant Biographical Sketch Predoctoral Sample

Attachment 10C Fellowship Applicant Biographical Sketch Predoctoral Sample.docx

PHS Applications and Pre-award Related Reporting (OD)

Attachment 10C Fellowship Applicant Biographical Sketch Predoctoral Sample

OMB: 0925-0001

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf

Shape1

OMB No. 0925-0001 and 0925-0002 (Rev. 10/15 Approved Through 10/31/2018)

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH SAMPLE—PREDOCTORAL FELLOWS

(Note this Sample is for a Predoctoral Fellowship Applicant only and does not include information specific to Dissertation Research Awards or Diversity Supplements.)

DO NOT EXCEED FIVE PAGES.


NAME OF APPLICANT: Leilani Robertson-Chang

eRA COMMONS USER NAME (credential, e.g., agency login): RobertsonL

POSITION TITLE: Graduate Student Research Assistant

EDUCATION/TRAINING (Most applicants will begin with baccalaureate or other initial professional education, such as nursing. Include postdoctoral training and residency training if applicable. High school students should list their current institution and associated information. Add/delete rows as necessary.)

INSTITUTION AND LOCATION

DEGREE

(if applicable)


START DATE

MM/YYYY


END DATE

(or expected end date)

MM/YYYY

FIELD OF STUDY


Swarthmore College

B.A

08/2008

05/2012

Biology

UC San Diego

Ph.D.

08/2012

05/2018

Molecular Biology
















A. Personal Statement

My long term research interests involve the development of a comprehensive understanding of key developmental pathways and how alterations in gene expression contribute to human disease. My academic training and research experience to date have provided me with an excellent background in molecular biology and microbiology. While in high school I was awarded an NIH Diversity Supplement award to work as a research technician for two summers in Dr. Indira Creative’s lab at the University of Hawaii. As an undergraduate at Swarthmore College, I conducted research with Dr. Xavier Factor on the mechanisms of action of a new class of antibiotics. This resulted in a co-authorship publication, as well as an invitation to present a poster at the annual Antibiotica meeting in Denver, Colorado. For my graduate training at UC San Diego, I have moved into the fields of genetics and biochemistry by studying the regulation of transcription in yeast, under Dr. Tanti Auguri. Dr. Auguri is an internationally recognized leader in the field of yeast genetics and has an extensive record for training predoctoral and postdoctoral fellows. Along with giving me new conceptual and technical training, the proposed training plan outlines a set of career development activities and workshops – e.g. public speaking, literature analysis, biomedical ethics, and career options. For my initial project I am currently developing a novel protocol for the purification for components of large transcription complexes which I hope to submit as a first author publication in the next few months. As a native Hawaiian, I am the first in my family to graduate from college so I am excited to keep pushing forward with my education. Overall, I feel that my choice of sponsor, research project, and the training I will get from this fellowship will give me a solid foundation for my long-term goal to become an academic researcher.

  1. Robertson-Chang L and Auguri, T. 2005. A tandem affinity purification tag approach allows for isolation of interacting proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In preparation.

  2. Robertson-Chang L and Auguri, T. A tandem affinity purification tag approach allows for isolation of interacting proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Abstract for poster presentation, 2004 Yeast Genetics and Molecular Biology Meeting, Seattle, Washington, September 2004.

B. Positions and Honors

Positions and Employment

ACTIVITY/

OCCUPATION

START
DATE MM/YYYY

END
DATE MM/YYYY

FIELD

INSTITUTION/

COMPANY

SUPERVISOR/
EMPLOYER

Lab Technician (Summers)

06/2007

08/2008

Biology

University of Hawaii

I.M Creative

Predoc

08/2012

Present

Molecular Biology

UC San Diego

Xavier Factor













Other Experience and Professional Memberships

Sigma Xi

Association for Women in Science

Academic and Professional Honors

Daughters of Hawaii Scholarship, 2008

National Merit Scholarship, 2008-2012

Paula F. Laufenberg award for best senior project in the Biology Department, Swarthmore College, 2012

B.S. awarded with high honors, Swarthmore College, 2012

NIH Diversity Supplement 2007-2008 (Summers)

C. Contributions to Science

  1. High School Research: I spent two summers doing research in the laboratory of Dr. Indira M. Creative at University of Hawaii, funded by a NIH Diversity Supplement award. Dr. Creative has developed several new anti-fungal drugs that might protect against skin infections. Over the course of two summers I set up in vitro cultures of skin cell lines and conducted a wide range of toxicity assays. We were excited to find that one of the new agents showed almost no toxicity, even at fairly high doses. Dr. Creative is now testing the drug in animals exposed to different types of fungal infections, including Candida albicans.

  1. Footman, B., Eisser, J.K., Robertson-Chang, L. and Creative, I.M. 1998. Testing XXH for toxicity in vitro. Abstract for poster presentation, University of Hawaii Research Symposium, Manoa, HI.

  1. Undergraduate Research: I was part of a project in the laboratory of Dr. Xavier Factor at Swarthmore College. Dr. Factor’s laboratory studies the mechanisms of action of antibiotics. During my time in his lab I was looking at how a new antibiotic, Gen Y, is able to unravel bacterial DNA. The work was particularly exciting because it looks like the mechanism used by Factor Y might be completely novel, making it a potential candidate for treating patients infected with antibiotic resistant organisms. Dr. Factor was recently awarded a patent for this new drug.

  1. Nieman, P.Y., Robertson-Chang, L., Pearson, K. and Factor, X. 2003. Gen Y: a novel antibiotic with DNA unwinding abilities. Cell. Mol. Biol. 30: 25-30.

  2. Robertson-Chang, L. and Factor, X. Testing the ability of antibiotic Gen Y to kill Gram-negative bacteria. Abstract for poster presentation. 2002. Antibiotica annual meeting, Denver, Colorado, September 2002.

  1. Graduate Research: My ongoing predoc research is focused on transcriptional gene regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. I believe the results from my research will likely be highly relevant to human health as they will provide new details into the workings of complex biological systems, which will allow for further extrapolations into the development of certain diseases and their progression. I am currently developing a novel protocol for the purification for components of large transcription complexes which I hope to submit as a first author publication in the next few months.

  1. Robertson-Chang L and Auguri, T. 2005. A tandem affinity purification tag approach allows for isolation of interacting proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In preparation.

  2. Robertson-Chang L and Auguri, T. A tandem affinity purification tag approach allows for isolation of interacting proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Abstract for poster presentation, 2004 Yeast Genetics and Molecular Biology Meeting, Seattle, Washington, September 2004.

D. Scholastic Performance


YEAR

SCIENCE COURSE TITLE

GRADE

YEAR

OTHER COURSE TITLE

GRADE


SWARTHMORE COLLEGE



SWARTHMORE COLLEGE


2008

Cellular and Molecular Biology

A

2008

First Year Seminar: Nation and Migration

A

2008

Foundations of Chemical Principles

A

2009

Statistics, Probability, and Reliability

A

2009

Organismal and Population Biology

B

2009

Calculus I

B

2009

Omics

B

2010

American Literature

B

2009

General Physics I

B

2011

Anthropology of Childhood and the Family

A

2009

Introductory Chemistry

A

2011

Disease, Culture and Society in the Modern World

A

2009

Organic Chemistry I

B




2010

General Physics II

B




2010

Organic Chemistry II

B




2010

Microbial Pathogenesis and the Immune Response

A




2010

Introduction to Cognitive Science

A




2010

Biological Chemistry

B




2011

Human Genetics

A




2011

Senior Project

A




2011

Bioinformatics

B




2012

Cell Biology

A




2012

Physics in Modern Medicine

A




2012

Genomics and Systems Biology

A




2012

Senior Project

A











UC SAN DIEGO





2012

Seminar in Genetics

P




2013

Statistics for the Life Sciences

P




2013

Ethics in Biological Research

CRE




2014

Seminar in Physiology & Behavior

P






Except for the scientific ethics course, UC San Diego graduate courses are graded P (pass) or F (fail). Passing is C plus or better. The scientific ethics course is graded CRE (credit) or NC (no credit). Students must attend at least seven of the eight presentation/discussion sessions for credit.




File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
File TitleOMB No. 0925-001 (Rev. 08/12), Biographical Sketch Format Page
AuthorNIH
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2022-07-25

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy