¾ÅÓÎÌåÓý

Member News

Cell biology, microbiology societies present awards

Honorees include Trejo, Olzmann, Farber, Wickner, Moss
Laurel Oldach
Sept. 14, 2020

ASCB awards for Trejo, Olzmann, Farber

The American Society for Cell Biology has announced its annual awards for 2021, and three ¾ÅÓÎÌåÓý members are among its slate of awardees.

Joann Trejo

, a professor and assistant vice chancellor for health sciences faculty affairs at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, has received the ASCB’s prize for excellence in inclusivity, which recognizes a scientist who champions inclusion and diversity in science with a $5,000 award to further their inclusion activities. In addition to studying protease-activated receptor and G-protein–coupled receptor signaling in vascular inflammation and breast cancer progression, Trejo is dedicated to faculty mentoring and trainee mentoring; the award is the latest in a series of mentoring and inclusivity awards recognizing her work from ASCB, ASBMB and UCSD.

James Olzmann

, an associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley, has received the Günter Blobel Early Career Award, which honors a researcher less than seven years into an independent career. (The ASCB recently renamed the award in honor of Blobel, a cell biologist and Nobel laureate who died in 2018). Olzmann’s lab studies lipid droplet function with special interest in the proteins that regulate lipid storage and mobilization from inside these organelles. He also won a 2019 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers.

Steven Farber

, a principal investigator at the Carnegie Institution for Science embryology department and adjunct professor in the Johns Hopkins University biology department, shares this year’s Bruce Alberts Award for Excellence in Science Education with Jamie Shuda. Farber and Shuda are the co-creators of an outreach educational program, , which has used hands-on experiments with zebra fish to teach science to more than 130,000 students in grades 4 through 12. Farber’s lab studies digestive organ physiology in developing zebra fish larvae with a focus on the cell and molecular biology of lipids.

 


ASM career awards for Wickner, Moss

The American Society for Microbiology has announced the recipients of its 2021 awards, including ¾ÅÓÎÌåÓý members Sue Wickner and Bernard Moss among the honorees. Both are distinguished investigators who lead laboratories at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda.

Sue Wickner

, head of the molecular biology of DNA section at the National Cancer Institute, has received the ASM award for Basic Research, which recognizes a scientist “whose discoveries have been fundamental to advancing our understanding of the microbial world.” Her work focuses on heat-shock proteins, a family of ATP-dependent molecular chaperones that participate in protein folding and proteolysis in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Her lab found that these chaperones can also participate in protein disaggregation, helping cells respond to stress. Wickner is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Bernard Moss

, head of the genetic engineering section of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease, was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award, which recognizes a career of sustained contribution to the field of microbiology. Moss, a virologist and former president of the American Society for Virology, is known for research into viral mRNA capping; immune evasion through expression of proteins that resemble host cytokines; and the use of vaccinia-based vectors for vaccines. Moss reflected on his long career in a in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the AAAS.


 

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Laurel Oldach

Laurel Oldach is a former science writer for the ASBMB.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

Cedeño–Rosario and Kaweesa win research award
Member News

Cedeño–Rosario and Kaweesa win research award

Sept. 8, 2025

The award honors outstanding early-career scientists studying cancer, infectious disease and basic science.

ASBMB names 2026 award winners
Award

ASBMB names 2026 award winners

Sept. 5, 2025

Check out their lectures at the annual meeting in March in the Washington, D.C., metro area.

Peer through a window to the future of science
Annual Meeting

Peer through a window to the future of science

Sept. 3, 2025

Aaron Hoskins of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Sandra Gabelli of Merck, co-chairs of the 2026 ASBMB annual meeting, to be held March 7–10, explain how this gathering will inspire new ideas and drive progress in molecular life sciences.

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants
Member News

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants

Sept. 1, 2025

They will receive at least $1 million of funding to study the biological mechanisms that underly birds' longevity and sequence–function relationships of intrinsically disordered proteins.

How undergrad research catalyzes scientific careers
Essay

How undergrad research catalyzes scientific careers

Aug. 27, 2025

Undergraduate research doesn’t just teach lab skills, it transforms scientists. For Antonio Rivera and Julissa Cruz–Bautista, joining a lab became a turning point, fostering critical thinking, persistence and research identity.

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award
Member News

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award

Aug. 25, 2025

They were honored for contributing their time, knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to mentoring postdocs in their labs.