Stephen Doster

  • Vanderbilt University

    Global engagement fund applications now open

    Spring 2025 Travel & Research Seed Proposals due by Dec. 6, 2024  Read More

    Nov. 14, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    Boundary-Spanning Genius

    For John Jumper, BS’07, the road to winning the Nobel Prize in chemistry began with an interdisciplinary education at Vanderbilt. Read More

    Nov. 14, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt Vaccine Center discovery aids effort to stop a deadly virus in Rwanda

    Nov. 14, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    VCAR Science Day brings leading addiction researchers together

    Nov. 9, 2024

  • A Non-Exhaustive List of Papers on the Development and Application of Critical Phase Theory to Membrane Phase Behaviour

    A Non-Exhaustive List of Papers on the Development and Application of Critical Phase Theory to Membrane Phase Behaviour

    Compiled by Chuck Sanders to accompany Protein Society newsletter article (Sept. 2024 issue): Critical Points and The Unsinkable Lipid Raft Hypothesis Reverse Chronological Order The Membrane Phase Transition Gives Rise to Responsive Plasma Membrane Structure and Function. Shelby SA, Veatch SL.  Cold Spring… Read More

    Sep. 17, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    From Lab to Market: Turning ideas into business ventures

    Are you sitting on a game-changing idea that could revolutionize your industry? Don't let it gather dust—Vanderbilt University’s expert tech transfer team is here to help you bring it to life. With a proven track record of transforming cutting-edge research into successful business ventures, they possess the knowledge, resources, and connections to transform your innovation from concept to reality. Read More

    Sep. 11, 2024

  • Ramakrishnan Apex Lecture Agenda

    Ramakrishnan Apex Lecture Agenda

    Apex Lecture: Venki Ramakrishan, “Why We Die” Agenda 3:00  Introduction, John Kuriyan, Dean, Basic Sciences, School of Medicine… Read More

    Aug. 24, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    The Caprioli Way

    It started with a hacksaw and a multimillion-dollar instrument. Richard Caprioli, then a postdoctoral fellow, was given the saw to cut the instrument in half during his first day of his postdoctoral studies. It was the day that Caprioli, now Stanford Moore Professor of Biochemistry, developed a desire to “do innovative things” with mass spectrometry instruments.” This yearning resulted in him becoming a pioneer of new mass spec techniques, including imaging mass spec. Read More

    Jul. 8, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    Walter Chazin

      Walter Chazin, Ph.D., received a B.Sc. in chemistry from McGill University in 1975 and a Ph.D. in chemistry from Concordia University in Montreal in 1983. He was a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Kurt Wüthrich at the E.T.H. in Switzerland (2002 Nobel laureate in Chemistry). After 13… Read More

    Mar. 28, 2024

  • Vanderbilt University

    Taking a Bite Out of Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease

    “You’re nervous because you don't know what to expect and excited to see whatever it is you get to see,” Schlafly said of the visit. "I had seen a lab before, but I must say, it’s a pretty humbling experience to go from thinking there is no one at all who knows about your really weird, rare disease to walking into a lab and learning that everyone there is in some way working to cure my issue.” Read More

    Mar. 18, 2024