New Measurement Strategies to Characterize Brain Chemistry
Prof. Jonathan V. Sweedler
美国伊利诺伊大学
Editor-in-Chief for Analytical Chemistry
时间:2016年6月3日(星期五)11:00-12:00
地点:卢嘉锡楼202报告厅
厦门大学谱学分析与仪器教育部重点实验室
厦门大学化学化工学院
2016年6月2日
Biography:
Jonathan Sweedler received his Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Arizona in 1988, spent several years at Stanford before moving to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1991 where he has been ever since. At Illinois, he is currently the James R. Eiszner Family Endowed Chair in Chemistry, Director of the School of Chemical Science, and affiliated with the Institute of Genomic Biology and the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. His research interests focus on developing new approaches for assaying small volume samples, and in applying these methods to study novel interactions between cells. These analytical approaches include capillary separations, micro and nanofluidics, miniaturized separations, mass spectrometry and NMR. He has used these tools to characterize small molecules and peptides in a range of animal models across metazoan life and in samples as small as individual cells and cellular domains. Recent work includes the development of a series of high throughput mass spectrometry approaches for characterizing tens of thousands of individual cells. Sweedler, with large international teams of biologists and technologists, has performed comprehensive interrogation of the genome, transcriptome and peptidome in Aplysiacalifornica, Schmidteamediterranea, Apismellifera, Taeniopygiaguttata, Strongylocentrotuspurpuratus, and other models to uncover signaling peptides and pathways involved in wide range of functions and behaviors.
Sweedler has published more than 350 manuscripts and presented 400 invited lectures. He has received numerous awards including the American Chemical Society (ACS) Analytical Division Arthur Findeis Award, the Benedetti-Pichler Award in Microanalysis, the Gill Prize in Neuroscience, the Instrumentation Award from the Analytical Division of the ACS, the Pittsburgh Analytical Chemistry Award, the 2014 ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry and the 2015 ANACHEM Award. He is a fellow of both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Chemical Society. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief for
Analytical Chemistry.