close up view of Aldrich chemicals on a shelf
Biological Chemistry Research Areas

The Department of Biological Chemistry is at the center of a strong and diverse biochemical community at the University of Michigan. Please visit the profile pages and lab websites of our faculty members to explore our research interests and learn about opportunities for students, fellows and scientific collaborators.

Primary Faculty

Ryan Baldridge, PhD
Mechanisms of membrane-bound protein quality control systems

Ruma Banerjee, PhD
Chemical biology of hydrogen sulfide signaling; regulation of mammalian sulfur metabolism in health and disease; structural enzymology of human B12 trafficking proteins

Jay Brito Querido, PhD
Single-particle cryo-electron microscopy in combination with biochemical approaches to study how messenger RNA translation is regulated in human health and disease

Uhn-Soo Cho, PhD
Biochemical and structural studies of kinetochore assembly, histone chaperones, and Sestrin-mediated mTORC1 regulation

Michael Cianfrocco, PhD
Structural biology and biophysics underlying microtubule-based intracellular transport

Lydia Freddolino, PhD
Bacterial chromosomal structure and its effect on gene regulation; structure-function relationships in transcriptional regulators; merging experimental and computational data in protein-DNA and protein-RNA binding free energy landscapes; high throughput structure-based function prediction; optimal use of crosslinking mass spectrometry for structure determination; structural genomics

Tobias Giessen, PhD
Structure, function, and engineering of large protein assemblies

Daniel Goldman, PhD
Identification of signaling pathways, chromatin alterations, and gene expression programs that drive central nervous system regeneration using the retina as a model system

Phyllis Hanson, MD, PhD
Protein-protein and protein-membrane interactions involved in membrane trafficking and organelle structure

Tom Kerppola, PhD
Protein interactions and modifications in living cells and animals; roles of transcription factor complexes in the control of gene expression; mechanisms whereby cells and animals recognize and respond to synthetic chemicals

James Morrissey, PhD
Biochemistry of the human blood clotting system; structural studies of protein-membrane complexes

Rachel Niederer, PhD
Combining high-throughput experimental methods with biochemistry and molecular biology to discover translational control elements and characterize novel regulatory mechanisms impacting gene expression

Patrick O'Brien, PhD
Biochemical, biophysical, and structural approaches to understanding mechanisms of human DNA repair

Bruce Palfey, PhD
Enzyme reaction mechanisms and inhibitor design, with a focus on therapeutically important flavoproteins

Stephen Ragsdale, PhD
Molecular mechanisms and interactions of proteins involved in heme metabolism, the circadian clock, the global carbon cycle, and methylmercury; molecular mechanisms of redox, heme, and gas signaling pathways

Janet Smith, PhD
Structure-function studies of proteins using X-ray crystallography, with an emphasis on complex enzymes and the replication proteins of flaviviruses and alphaviruses

Raymond Trievel, PhD
Chemical and structural biology of enzymes that covalently modify histones, transcription factors, and other nuclear proteins; current research focuses on elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying the specificities of histone methyltransferases and demethylases and on developing new assays and reagents to characterize them

David Turner, PhD
Transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms that control neuronal differentiation; regulation of gene expression in the mammalian retina by microRNAs and other small RNAs

Anne Vojtek, PhD
Molecular and biochemical analysis of signaling pathways that regulate cell proliferation and neural differentiation

Chase Weidmann, PhD
Integrating multi-omics technologies and cell-based functional assays to characterize ribonucleoprotein networks in biology and human disease

Zhaohui Xu, PhD
Structural biology and molecular mechanisms of protein folding and trafficking in eukaryotic cells

Yan Zhang, PhD
Biology, mechanisms, and technological applications of bacterial CRISPR-Cas systems

 

Secondary Joint Faculty

James Bardwell, PhD
Roles of molecular chaperones and disulfide catalysts in protein folding; experimental evolution of protein folding

Wei Cheng, PhD
Using biochemical approaches aided by biophysical tools to mechanistically dissect the responses of B cells to particulate antigens both in vivo and in vitro, with a focus on the quantitative features of viral particles and their impact on B cells

Renny Franceschi, PhD
Signals regulating the formation and functioning of osteoblasts, the cells that produce and mineralize the extracellular matrix of bone; control of gene expression in osteoblasts

Herman Fung, PhD
Structural and cell biology approaches to study the spatial organization of chromatin and how its dynamic structure underlies organismal development

Ursula Jakob, PhD
Biochemical aspects of the bacterial response to oxidative stress

Neil Marsh, PhD
Structure and mechanism of radical S-adenosylmethionine-dependent enzymes, enzymes in hydrocarbon biosynthesis and degradation, design of self-assembling protein nano-cages

Shyamal Mosalaganti, PhD
Applying cryo-electron tomography and other biochemical and cell biological methods to understand how lysosomes perform their functions, undergo repair, and communicate with other organelles to maintain cellular fitness

John Prensner, MD, PhD
RNA translation in the non-coding genome; multi-omics approaches to elucidate patterns of translational regulation (or dysregulation) in pediatric cancer

Brian Ross, PhD
Molecular imaging of biological processes in living tissue, including noninvasive detection of molecular signaling events to investigate cancer growth and response to therapy

Debra Thompson, PhD
Molecular studies of the function of the mammalian retina, including mechanisms that control signal transduction and tissue-specific gene expression in the retinal pigment epithelium

Nils Walter, PhD
Powerful single molecule studies of mechanistic structure-dynamics-function relationships in RNAs of biomedical and bioanalytical significance; current work ranges from small bacterial riboswitches to RNA-protein complexes involved in human disease

Affiliate Faculty

Matthew Chapman, PhD 
Biogenesis of bacterial amyloid fibers called curli  

Kathleen Collins, MD, PhD 
Molecular mechanisms of viral immune evasion and development of strategies to inhibit these processes 

Pierre Coulombe, PhD 
Regulation of cell differentiation and tissue homeostasis in complex epithelia such as skin, studied from the unique perspective of keratin intermediate filament genes and proteins 

Morgan DeSantis, PhD 
Assembly, cargo transport function, and regulation of microtubule-associated motor proteins 

Ajit Joglekar, PhD 
Cell biology, biophysics, and biochemistry of mitosis  

Sarah Keane, PhD 
Investigation of RNA structure, function, and folding using NMR spectroscopy and other biochemical and biophysical techniques 

Nicole Koropatkin, PhD 
Molecular details of carbohydrate recognition and uptake by human gut bacteria 

Markos Koutmos, PhD 
Structure, function, and dynamics of proteins and RNAs 

Kristin Koutmou, PhD 
RNA modifications and their effect on gene expression 

Stephanie Moon, PhD 
Messenger RNA function, localization, and RNA-Protein granules 

John Moran, PhD 
LINE-1 retrotransposition: molecular mechanism and effect on the structure and function of human genomes 

Jayakrishnan (JK) Nandakumar, PhD
Applying biochemistry, cell biology and X-ray crystallography to understand the roles of telomerase and telomeres in cancer, aging, and meiosis 

Teresa O'Meara, PhD 
Functional genomics and genetic approaches to investigate host-pathogen interactions and the evolution and selective pressures driving pathogenesis 

Melanie Ohi, PhD 
Structural and functional studies of dynamic molecular machines using single particle cryo-electron microscopy, biochemistry, and genetics 

Scott Pletcher, PhD 
Genetic mechanisms of aging and age-related disease using the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, as a model system 

Brandon Ruotolo, PhD 
Development of new tools and methods for determining the three-dimensional structure and stability of proteins and multi-protein assemblies important in biology and medicine  

Emily Scott, PhD 
Structure and function of cytochrome P450 enzymes that are drug targets or involved in drug metabolism  

Peter Todd, MD, PhD 
Roles of RNA and RNA processing in neurological disease 

Anthony Vecchiarelli, PhD 
Molecular mechanisms underlying the subcellular organization of bacterial organelles