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The
Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute, an internationally renowned
biocrystallographic research center headed by Herbert Hauptman (1985
Nobel Laureate in Chemistry), has received funds from KeyBank
to allow the offering of a graduate fellowship to a minority student
in the Department of Structural Biology, a department of the UB School
of Medicine and Biological Sciences.
The focus of the UB/HWI Structural Biology Department is biological form
and function at the level of the three-dimensional atomic architecture
of biological macromolecules and macromolecular assemblies. The department’s
program of graduate studies provides thorough training in the principles
and practice of the main methodologies of structural molecular biology,
namely: protein expression, purification, and crystallization; X-ray diffraction
crystallography; nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; and computational
structural modeling. The core faculty of the Structural Biology Department
is comprised of the Institute's principal staff scientists. The Institute
and Department are housed in a beautiful new building on the Buffalo-Niagara
Medical Campus adjacent to the UB Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics
and Life Sciences and the Roswell Park Cancer Institute's Centers for Genetics
and Pharmacology. The structural biology faculty also includes some
members who are cross-appointed from these neighboring centers and from
other UB bioscience departments.
One track of the structural biology Ph.D. program includes the first year
cell biology, molecular biology and biochemistry courses of the Interdisciplinary
Graduate Program in Biomedical Sciences (http://www.smbs.buffalo.edu/rbe/igpbs/program.htm).
In their second year, students study core courses in the methods of structural
biology, and, throughout their program of study and research, they take
part in departmental research and literature seminars. By the beginning
of their second year, students choose a thesis or dissertation research
topic and faculty advisor, and they commence their research. For
admission to degree candidacy, students are required to present and defend
orally a written proposal concerning their research project and to pass
a comprehensive oral examination issuing from the oral proposal presentation. The
Ph.D. dissertation research must represent an original investigation designed
to contribute new knowledge and understanding of biomolecular form and
function or to develop new methodology for research in structural biology. It
is expected that this research will normally lead to publication, in prominent
refereed journals, of one or more research papers of which the student
is the principal author.
For further information, use the buttons on the side bar or
contact Prof. Robert H. Blessing, Director of Graduate Studies (email:
blessing@hwi.buffalo.edu;
phone: 716-898-8613).
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