First Person: Megan Cory’s Campaign to Fight Diabetes

12 years ago

Megan Cory, an undergraduate student in the Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry was featured by KPCC in a radio clip discussing her campaign to fight diabetes. KPCC (By Elizabeth Aguilera): A young woman is diagnosed with diabetes. Her response: conduct a frontal assault against it in society. Megan Cory learned she had the disease around the […]

First Person: Megan Cory’s Campaign to Fight Diabetes
November 25

2014 HPCwire Awards

12 years ago

Professors Ken Houk, Yi Tang, and colleagues have won HPCwire’s 2014 Reader’s Choice Award for the “Best Use of HPC (High-performance computing) Application in Life Sciences”. HPCwire.com: Every year, HPCwire conducts their annual Readers’ Choice Awards to recognize the best and the brightest developments that happened in HPC over the last 12 months. These awards, which […]

2014 HPCwire Awards
November 25

UCLA Biochemists Build Largest Synthetic Molecular ‘Cage’ Ever

12 years ago

New nanoscale protein container developed by Professor Todd Yeates and colleagues could lead to synthetic vaccines and offer a way to deliver medicine inside of human cells. UCLA Newsroom (By Stuart Wolpert): UCLA biochemists have created the largest-ever protein that self-assembles into a molecular “cage.” The research could lead to synthetic vaccines that protect people […]

UCLA Biochemists Build Largest Synthetic Molecular ‘Cage’ Ever
November 21

New Method for Methanol Processing Could Reduce Carbon Dioxide Emissions

12 years ago

The new process developed by Professor James Liao and colleagues could reduce carbon dioxide emissions and lower production costs. UCLA Newsroom (By Matthew Chin): Researchers at UCLA have developed a more efficient way to turn methanol into useful chemicals, such as liquid fuels, and that would also reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Methanol, which is a […]

New Method for Methanol Processing Could Reduce Carbon Dioxide Emissions
November 21

Outreach and Diversity Day

12 years ago

On November 7, 2014, the Graduate Student Affairs Office held its first annual Outreach and Diversity Day, co-sponsored by the American Chemical Society (ACS). The event was created as a recruiting mechanism to invite prospective students from diversity-sponsored programs to visit the UCLA campus and learn more about graduate life in our department. Students from […]

Outreach and Diversity Day
November 14

Persuading Proteins to Form Porous Polyhedra

12 years ago

Professor Todd Yeates and colleagues have designed a hollow cube out of naturally occurring proteins, something that was previously only possible with DNA. The custom-built protein structures might be used for drug delivery, or as reaction or crystallisation vessels. RSC Chemistry World (By Katrina Kramer): Researchers have been engineering DNA into custom nanostructures (DNA origami) […]

Persuading Proteins to Form Porous Polyhedra
November 14

Frontlines of Interdisciplinary Research

12 years ago

Professor Paul Weiss was featured on the cover story of Japan’s Advanced Institute for Materials Research Magazine and discussed the potential in fusing mathematics and materials science. In the article, Professor Weiss was interviewed with UCLA Professor Stan Osher, and the two discussed about the collaboration between their research groups. Excerpt from the interview AIMR: […]

Frontlines of Interdisciplinary Research
November 7

Best Global Universities

12 years ago

UCLA is the number 5 university in the subject of chemistry and number 8 overall in the inaugural U.S. News and World Report Rankings – Best Global Universities. The inaugural U.S. News Best Global Universities rankings were produced to provide insight into how universities compare globally. As an increasing number of students are planning to […]

Best Global Universities
October 31