Nicholas Ingolia Explained
Nicholas Ingolia |
Birth Name: | Nicholas Thomas Ingolia |
Birth Date: | 5 February 1979[1] |
Birth Place: | San Francisco, California |
Nicholas Thomas Ingolia (born February 5, 1979) is an American molecular biologist and assistant professor at University of California, Berkeley. He is most known for the development of the method of ribosome profiling.[2] [3] He has also studied the evolution of heat-sensing nerves in vampire bats and the encoding of small peptides by brief open reading frames.[4] [5] Ingolia is a 2011 Searle Scholar and serves on a peer-review committee for the American Cancer Society.[6] [7]
Notes and References
- Web site: Nicholas Thomas Ingolia, Born 02/05/1979 in California . California Birth Index . August 5, 2018 . en.
- Web site: Nicholas Ingolia CV. 2018-02-21. ingolia-lab.org.
- Web site: Faculty Research Page: Nicholas Ingolia. University of California, Berkeley. 2013-09-19. 2018-02-21.
- News: Vampire Bats Have Vein Sensors. https://web.archive.org/web/20110805040043/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/08/110803-vampire-bats-blood-heat-veins-science-animals-nature/. dead. August 5, 2011. Dell'Amore. Christine. 2011-08-04. National Geographic. 2018-02-21.
- Web site: Noncoding RNAs Not So Noncoding. Williams. Ruth. 2016-06-01. The Scientist. 2018-02-21.
- Web site: Searle Scholars Program : Nicholas Ingolia (2011). searlescholars.net. 2018-02-21.
- Web site: Peer Review Committee for RNA Mechanisms in Cancer (RMC). cancer.org. 2018-02-21.