“Nucleic Acid Transactions and the Awesome Power of Structural Biology”

On Friday, January 19, 2024,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
will award the Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Professor Juli Feigon
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry

Poster Session CNSI Lobby – 12:00 to 1:00 pm
Symposium CNSI Auditorium – 1:00 to 5:30 pm
Reception & Dinner UCLA Covel Commons Grand Horizon Room
6:00 to 9:00 pm

Registration Closed

The Seaborg Symposium Medal Award Dinner registration is now closed.
If you would like to check the event’s availability for additional guests, please email » Isaiah Gutierrez.


2023-2024 Seaborg Symposium Speakers

Prof. Alexander Spokoyny
Department Chair
University of California, Los Angeles
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks


Prof-. Thomas Cech
Department of Biochemistry
University of Colorado Boulder
“RNA Controls DNA in the Human Cell Nucleus”


Prof. Michael Summers
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
“How HIV-1 Selectively Packages it’s RNA Genom “


Prof. Karolin Luger
Department of Biochemistry
University of Colorado Boulder
“Histones for All: Genome Compaction Throughout the Tree of Life”


Prof. Hong Zhou
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, & Molecular Genetics
University of California, Los Angeles
“CryoEM Structures of Endogenous Complexes
Involved in Trypanosomal RNA Editing


Prof. Juli Feigon
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of California, Los Angeles
“My Winding Road From G-quadruplexes to Telomerase”


Prof. Miguel Garcia-Garibay
Dean of UCLA Physical Sciences, Senior Dean of UCLA College
University of California, Los Angeles,
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Closing Remarks

About Professor Juli Feigon

Professor Juli Feigon received her B.A. from Occidental College and her M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of California, San Diego where she studied with Dr. David Kearns. Her postdoctoral work was completed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she was a Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer Fund Postdoctoral Fellow with Dr. Alexander Rich.

Dr. Feigon has been a UCLA faculty member since 1985, when she was appointed the first female Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. She currently holds the rank of Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry and the Christopher Foote Term Chair. Her awards and honors include the Dupont Young Faculty Award (1985-1986), Presidential Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation (1989-1994), Camille and Henry Dreyfus Teacher/Scholar Award (1990), Glenn T. Seaborg Research Award (1992), Herbert Newby McCoy Award, (1993, 2009, 2022), elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) (2002), Elected Member, National Academy of Sciences (2009), Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin award of the Protein Society (2017), Biophysical Society Founders Award (2018), and UCLA Academic Senate Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Research Award (2020), and Finalist, Excellence in Postdoctoral Mentoring Award (2022).

Professor Feigon’s research interests are in structural biology of nucleic acids and their complexes. She pioneered the application of macromolecular NMR spectroscopy to the study of DNA and RNA structure, folding, and interactions with cations, drugs, and proteins. Her laboratory published the first high resolution structures of DNA triplexes, quadruplexes, and aptamers, and her work has provided fundamental insights into DNA A-tract and protein induced bending, cation interactions with DNA, Hoogsteen base pairs, and drug binding to DNA. She has made major contributions to understanding RNA folding and function, including studies of RNA aptamers, ribozymes, and riboswitches, and recognition of RNA by proteins. Her laboratory solved the first NMR structure of a riboswitch and set the standard for high-resolution RNA structures determined by NMR.

For all of this work, she developed new NMR methods and applications for studying nucleic acids structure and dynamics, including assignments and detecting cation interactions. Her work has combined structural and functional studies of RNA–protein complexes to reveal essential determinants of protein recognition of single stranded and of double stranded RNA by RRMs and dsRBDs, respectively. Currently, the Feigon laboratory employs an integrative structural biology approach combining NMR spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, and electron microscopy (EM) along with biochemistry to study structure, dynamics, assembly, and function of non-coding RNA and RNA-protein complexes, in particular 7SK RNP and telomerase. Over the past two decades, her laboratory pioneered structural studies of telomerase, from solution NMR and X-ray crystal structure and dynamics studies of telomerase RNA and RNA-protein domains of human and Tetrahymena telomerase to the first structure of a telomerase holoenzyme, by negative stain EM at 25 Å resolution, and cryo-EM studies telomerase and associated proteins at increasingly higher resolution.

The Seaborg Symposium and Medal Award Dinner events are made possible by the continued support of our generous donors.

“Bringing Chemistry to Life”

On August 17, 2022, the Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry honored 2022 Nobel Laureate Professor Carolyn Bertozzi (Stanford) with the 2022 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal in recognition of her seminal contributions to the field.

A symposium entitled “Bringing Chemistry to Life”, a poster session, and an evening medal award dinner were held in Bertozzi’s honor on the UCLA campus.

Click here to read more

“The Nanotechnology Revolution”

On Saturday, November 23, 2019, the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry awarded the 2019 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Dr. Paul Alivisatos
Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science & Engineering,
University of California, Berkeley



Dr. Richard Kaner
Professor, Dr. Myung Ki Hong Chair in Materials Innovation,
UCLA Departments of Chemistry & Biochemistry and Materials Science & Engineering
Welcoming and Closing Remarks


Dr. Dmitri Talapin (Introduction by Dr. Yu Huang)
Louis Block Professor, Department of Chemistry,
University of Chicago
“Nanocrystals in Molten Inorganic Salts and Liquid Metals”


Dr. Sarah Tolbert (Introduction by Dr. William Gelbart)
Professor, UCLA Departments of Chemistry & Biochemistry and Materials Science & Engineering
“From Phase Transitions to New Functionality in Nanostructured Materials”


Dr. Moungi Bawendi (Introduction by Dr. Justin Caram)
Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
“Some Applications of Colloidal Quantum Dots: In-Vivo Imaging in the Short-Wave Infrared, and a Potential Source of Quantum Light”


Dr. Uri Banin (Introduction by Dr. Benjamin Schwartz)
Professor, Institute of Chemistry and the Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology,
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
“Colloidal Quantum Dots; From Artificial Atoms to Artificial Molecules”


Dr. Paul Alivisatos (Introduction by Dr. Paul Weiss)
Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science & Engineering,
University of California, Berkeley
“What Will Happen When Artificial Nanocrystals can be Observed and Controlled at the Level of Single Atoms?”

ABOUT PROFESSOR PAUL ALIVISATOS

Dr. Armand Paul Alivisatos is the University of California (UC) Berkeley’s Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost and Samsung Distinguished Professor of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology. He is also the Founding Director of the Kavli Energy Nanoscience Institute (ENSI), former Director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, former UC Berkeley Vice Chancellor for Research, and holds professorships in UC Berkeley’s departments of chemistry and materials science. In addition, he is a founder of two prominent nanotechnology companies, Nanosys and Quantum Dot Corp, now a part of Life Technologies.

Groundbreaking contributions to the fundamental physical chemistry of nanocrystals are the hallmarks of Alivisatos’ distinguished career. His research accomplishments include studies of the scaling laws governing the optical, electrical, structural, and thermodynamic properties of nanocrystals. He developed methods to synthesize size and shape controlled nanocrystals, and developed methods for preparing branched, hollow, nested, and segmented nanocrystals. In his research, he has demonstrated key applications of nanocrystals in biological imaging and renewable energy. He played a critical role in the establishment of the Molecular Foundry, a U.S. Department of Energy’s Nanoscale Science Research Center; and was the facility’s founding director. He is the founding editor of Nano Letters, a leading scientific publication of the American Chemical Society in nanoscience.

Alivisatos has been widely recognized for his accomplishments, with awards such as the Dan David Prize, the National Medal of Science, the Spiers Memorial Award, Axion Award, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, the Von Hippel Award, the Linus Pauling Medal, Computation and Engineering’s Nanoscience Prize, the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award, the Rank Prize for Optoelectronics, the Eni Award for Energy and Environment, the ACS Colloid and Surface Chemistry Award, Coblentz Award for Molecular Spectroscopy and the Thomas Wilson Memorial Prize. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.

Alivisatos received a Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry in 1981 from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in Chemistry from UC Berkeley in 1986. He began his career with UC Berkeley in 1988 and with Berkeley Lab in 1991.

The Seaborg Symposium and Medal Award Dinner are made possible by the continued support of our generous donors. Thank you!

Sponsorship for this year’s events is being provided by the following corporations and individuals:

Kathy R. Bailey
Atsuko and Akira Fujimoto
Kendall N. Houk
David and Kathleen Jackson
De-En Jiang and Jianbo Xu
William and Nina Gelbart Michael Gresser
June Kim
Charles and Carolyn Knobler
Jeong Hoon Ko
Chong Liu
Emil and Hanna Reisler
Melville and Irene Sahyun

2019 Seaborg Symposium

2019 Seaborg Medal Award Dinner

Congratulations to the 2019 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session Winners!

(From left) Poster session judges and prize winners – Dr. Marlius Castillo, Dr. Anish Nag, Vince Hipwell, Stephanie Tenney, Jason Chari, Nicholas Bernier, Ga Young (Gina) Lee, Dr. Agape Awad.

Poster Session Winners

2019 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session

“The Revolution in Electron Cryo-Microscopy”


On Saturday, November 10, 2018,
in recognition of their crucial contributions to the science of electron cryo-microscopy,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry awarded the 2018 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Dr. Richard Henderson
Nobel Laureate Chemistry 2017
MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology

and

Dr. Robert Glaeser
Professor Emeritus
University of California, Berkeley


Dr. David Eisenberg
Paul D. Boyer Professor of Biochemistry, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry Welcoming Remarks


Dr. Jose Rodriguez (Introduction by Dr. David Eisenberg, UCLA)
Howard Reiss Career Development Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
“New Frontiers in Electron Diffraction: Resolving Amyloids with Atomic Detail”


Dr. Elizabeth Villa (Introduction by Dr. Juli Feigon, UCLA)
Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, San Diego
“Opening Windows into the Cell: Bringing Structure and Molecular Context to Cell Biology Using Cryo-Electron Microscopy”


Dr. Robert Glaeser (Introduction by Dr. Tamir Gonen, UCLA)
University of California, Berkeley
“Single-particle Cryo-EM: The Quest for Improvements in Specimen Preparation and Image Contrast”


Dr. Richard Henderson (Introduction by Dr. Z. Hong Zhou, UCLA)
Nobel Laureate Chemistry 2017
Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge
“The CryoEM Revolution in Structural Biology”


Dr. Z. Hong Zhou
Professor, UCLA Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Molecular Genetics
Closing Remarks

ABOUT THE 2018 MEDALISTS

Dr. Robert Glaeser (Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley) is a biophysicist and structural biologist who grew up in Wisconsin, where he obtained a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. After completing the Ph.D. in Biophysics at the University of California, Berkeley, he spent one year as a postdoctoral fellow in Oxford and a second year as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Chicago. He then returned to Berkeley as a faculty member and as a Staff Scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His University service includes a 5-year term as Divisional Dean of Biological Sciences, and his professional service includes a term as president of the Microscopy Society of America and a term as council member of the Biophysical Society. His professional honors include a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, the Alexander von Humboldt Award, membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and membership in the National Academy of Sciences.

Dr. Richard Henderson (MRC Laboratory of Microbiology, Cambridge) is a Scottish biophysicist and molecular biologist who was the first to successfully produce a three-dimensional image of a biological molecule at atomic resolution using a technique known as cryo-electron microscopy. Henderson’s refinement of imaging methods for cryo-electron microscopy, in which biomolecules are frozen in such a way that allows them to retain their natural shape and are then visualized with a high-resolution microscope, enabled researchers to capture images of numerous biomolecular structures that previously could not be imaged by other means. He was awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (shared with biophysicists Jacques Dubochet and Joachim Frank) for his work.

The Seaborg Symposium and Medal Award Dinner are made possible by the continued support of our generous donors. Thank you!

Sponsorship for this year’s events is being provided by the following corporations and individuals:

Kathy R. Bailey
Atsuko and Akira Fujimoto
William and Nina Gelbart
Kendall N. Houk
Charles and Carolyn Knobler
William W. Price, II
Emil and Hanna Reisler
Melville and Irene Sahyun
Stan Schein and Mae Greenwald

Donations to support the Seaborg events may be made on the registration website.

2018 Seaborg Symposium

2018 Seaborg Medal Award Dinner

Congratulations to the 2018 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session Winners!

On Saturday, November 10, 2018, a poster session was held as part of the 2018 Seaborg Symposium. Six winners were chosen – two postdoctoral scholars, three graduate students, and one undergraduate student. The winners were announced at the evening banquet and awards ceremony by the faculty member poster session judges.

(From left) Dr. Julia Stauber, Professor Chong Liu, Dr. Yaqiang Wang, David Reilley, Anish Nag, Jeannette Bowler, Omar Ebrahim, Professors Justin Caram, Agape Awad, and Joseph Loo.

Poster Session Winners

2018 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session

“Viruses, from Self-Assembly to Vaccines”

On Saturday, November 18, 2017,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2017 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Professor William Gelbart
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry



Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks


Avinoam Ben-Shaul, Ph.D.
Archie and Marjorie Sherman Professor of Theoretical Chemistry
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
“Modeling DNA and RNA In and Out of Viruses”


Donald Hilvert, Ph.D.
Professor, Chemistry and Applied Biosciences,
ETH Zürich
“Design and Evolution of Supercharged Protein Containers”


John (Jack) Johnson, Ph.D.
Elden R. Strahm Professor of Structural Virology,
Department of Integrative Structural and Computational Biology,
The Scripps Research Institute
“Bacteriophage Maturation: The Anatomy of a Molecular Machine”


Anne Moscona, Ph.D.
Sherie L. Morrison Professor of Immunology, Professor, Departments of Pediatrics, Microbiology & Immunology, and Physiology & Cellular Biophysics,
Columbia University Medical Center
“Early Steps of Infection by Paramyxoviruses”


Z. Hong Zhou, Ph.D.
Director, Electron Imaging Center for Nanomachines (EICN), CNSI
Professor, UCLA Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Molecular Genetics
“3D cryoEM comes of age: seeing atoms in proteins and genomes of viruses”


William Gelbart, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Viruses, from Self-Assembly to Vaccines”


Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Closing Remarks

Professor William Gelbart was trained as a physical chemical theorist, obtaining his BS at Harvard University (1967) and his PhD at the University of Chicago (1970), working on molecular spectroscopy theory. After two years of postdoctoral work – 1971 at the University of Paris and 1972 at UC Berkeley – he joined the Berkeley faculty in 1972, continuing his researches on the quantum theory of photochemistry. Prof. Gelbart moved to UCLA in 1975, switched fields, and became a leader in the then‐emerging field of “complex fluids”, contributing significantly to the statistical mechanical theory of liquid crystals, polymer solutions, colloids, and self‐assembling systems. Fifteen years ago he became deeply intrigued by viruses and, with his colleague Charles M. Knobler, established a laboratory to investigate simple viruses outside their hosts and isolated in test tubes. This work, along with that of several other groups in the States and Europe, helped launch the burgeoning field of “physical virology”. Prof. Gelbart’s interdisciplinary research has been recognized by many awards, including the 1991 Lennard‐Jones Medal of the British Royal Society, a 1998 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2001 Liquids Prize of the American Chemical Society, election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2009, and endowed lectureships at the University of Leeds (England) (1988), the Curie Institute (Paris) (1999), Case Western Reserve University (2002), Cornell University (2006), Carnegie Mellon University (2010), and the University of Pittsburgh (2012). At UCLA he won the 1996 University Distinguished Teaching Award, and served as Chair of Chemistry and Biochemistry from 2000 to 2004. In 2016 he was recognized by a festschrift issue of the Journal of Physical Chemistry and by an international workshop in his honor, entitled “Self-Assembly, from Atoms to Life”. Prof. Gelbart is currently UCLA Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and a member of the California NanoSystems Institute and Molecular Biology Institute at UCLA. He is married to author and Occidental College history professor Dr. Nina Gelbart and they have a son and a daughter and three grandchildren.

Professor Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D., Chair
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks

Professor Avinoam Ben-Shaul, Ph.D.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
“Modeling DNA and RNA In and Out of Viruses”

Professor Donald Hilvert, Ph.D.
ETH Zürich
“Design and Evolution of Supercharged Protein Containers”

Professor John (Jack) Johnson, Ph.D.
The Scripps Research Institute
“Bacteriophage Maturation: The Anatomy of a Molecular Machine”

Professor Anne Moscona, Ph.D.
Columbia University Medical Center
“Early Steps of Infection by Paramyxoviruses”

Professor Z. Hong Zhou, Ph.D.
UCLA Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Molecular Genetics
“3D CryoEM Comes of Age: Seeing Atoms in Proteins and Genomes of Viruses”

Professor William Gelbart, Ph.D.
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Viruses, from Self-Assembly to Vaccines”

Professor Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D., Chair
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Closing Remarks

2017 Seaborg Symposium

2017 Seaborg Symposium Medal Award Dinner

The Seaborg Symposium and Medal Award Dinner events are made possible by the continued support of our generous donors. Thank you!

Sponsorship for this year’s events is being provided by the following corporations and individuals:

Carolyn and Charles Knobler

Janet and Paul Stannard

Kathy Bailey
Catherine and Steven Clarke
Lucy and David Eisenberg
Neil Garg
Beatriz E. Ruiz Silva and Miguel García-Garibay Robin Garrell
Kendall Houk
Ga Young Lee
Lee and Dean Marvin
Emily Maverick
Ditsa and Alexander Pines
William W. Price, II
Hanna and Emil Reisler
Irene and Mel Sahyun
Mae Greenwald and Stan Schein
Karen and William Timberlake

Congratulations to the 2017 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session Winners!

On Saturday, November 18, 2017, a poster session was held as part of the 2017 Seaborg Symposium. Six winners were chosen – two postdoctoral scholars, three graduate students, and one undergraduate student. The winners were announced at the evening banquet and awards ceremony by the poster session judges, assistant professors Ellen Sletten, Jose Rodriguez, and Chong Liu.

Poster Session Winners

2017 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session

“Drug Discovery: From Bench to Market”

On Saturday, November 12, 2016,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
presented the 2016 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Professor Michael E. Jung
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry



Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks


John C. Martin, Ph.D.
Executive Chairman, Gilead Sciences, Inc.
“Medicinal Chemistry with Nucleotide Antivirals: From Research to Expanding Access”


Paul A. Wender, Ph.D.
Bergstrom Professor of Chemistry, Stanford University
“Therapeutic Function through Synthesis-Informed Design: First-in-Class Approaches to HIV/AIDS Eradication, Alzheimer’s Disease, and Drug Delivery”


Peter B. Dervan, Ph.D.
Bren Professor of Chemistry, California Institute of Technology
“Molecular Recognition of DNA. From Discovery to Applications”


Michael E. Jung, Ph.D.
Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Drug Discovery in Academia: Successful Case Studies”


Catherine F. Clarke, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Closing Remarks

2016 Seaborg Symposium

2016 Seaborg Medal Award Dinner

The Seaborg Symposium and Medal Award Dinner events are made possible by the continued support of our generous donors. Thank you!

Sponsorship for this year’s events was provided by the following corporations and individuals:

Dr. Sep Sershar
UCLA Chemistry ’89

Prof. Judith Smith

Ronald (’59) and Jeryl Abelmann
Kathy R. Bailey
Catherine and Steven Clarke
Cathy & Randy Fuhrman (’75)
William and Nina Gelbart
David Ho (’07)
Charles and Carolyn Knobler
Craig and Jennifer Merlic
Khanhlinh T. Nguyen
William W. Price, II
Emil and Hanna Reisler
Arlene (’68,’84) and Christopher Russell Jeff Schwartzmann (’74,’78)

Congratulations to the 2016 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session Winners!

On Saturday, November 12, 2016, a poster session was held as part of the 2016 Seaborg Symposium. This year six winners were chosen, two undergrads and four graduate students. They all won the same monetary award. The winners were announced at the evening banquet and awards ceremony by the poster session judges, assistant professors Hosea Nelson, Ellen Sletten and Alex Spokoyny.

Poster Session Winners

2016 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session

“New Physico-Chemical Tools for New Biology”

On Monday, October 19, 2015,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2015 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Prof. Stefan W. Hell
2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg


Miguel Garcia-Garibay, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks


Carlos Bustamante, Ph.D.
Raymond and Beverly Sackler Chair of Biophysics, Departments of Physics, Molecular & Cell Biology, and Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley
“Division of Labor Among the Subunits of a Highly Coordinated Ring ATPase”


Scott Fraser, Ph.D.
Provost Professor of Biology and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California
“Imaging Cellular and Molecular Events in Intact Biological Systems”


Shimon Weiss, Ph.D.
Dean Willard Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
“Pausing in Escherichia Coli Transcription Initiation”


Stefan W. Hell, Ph.D.
Professor, Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg
“Optical Microscopy: the Resolution Revolution”


Miguel Garcia-Garibay, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Closing Remarks

2015 UCLA Seaborg Symposium

2015 UCLA Seaborg Medal Award Dinner

Congratulations to the 2015 Seaborg Symposium Poster Session Winners!

On Monday, October 19, 2015, a poster session was held as part of the 2015 Seaborg Symposium. There were two categories of posters – undergraduate chemistry & postdoc/graduate chemistry. The winners were announced by Professor Bill Gelbart at the evening banquet and awards ceremony.

Postdoc/Graduate Student Winners

Undergraduate Student Winners

2015 UCLA Seaborg Symposium Poster Session

“Organic Materials and their Applications”

On Saturday, November 15, 2014,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2014 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Prof. Fred Wudl, Ph.D.
University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and co-director of the UCSB Center for Polymers and Organic Solids

Dr. Linda Wudl, Ph.D.
Former Vice President of Quality at Amgen




2014 Seaborg Symposium Program

Miguel Garcia-Garibay, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Welcoming Remarks


Mark E. Thompson, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of Southern California
“Getting Around the Current-Voltage Trade-off in Organic Photovoltaics”


Zhenan Bao, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University
“Skin Inspired Electronics with Organic Materials”


Craig J. Hawker, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Barbara
“New Approaches to Polymer Synthesis & Organic Building Blocks”


Ken Houk, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry, Saul Winstein Chair in Organic Chemistry, UCLA
“Computations of the Properties and Reactions of Organic Materials:
Adventures with Fred”


Fred Wudl, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Barbara, and co-director of the UCSB Center for Polymers and Organic Solids
“Organic Electronics and Organic Magnetism: a Solid-State Driven Quintet at Ambient Conditions”

More About Professor Fred Wudl, Ph.D. & Dr. Linda Wudl, Ph.D.

Linda and Fred Wudl both attended UCLA (where they met) and have since contributed a great deal to the sciences.
Prof. Fred Wudl has received numerous professional honors for his work in materials science, including the ACS Award for Chemistry of Materials and the Tolman Medal of the ACS Southern California Section. He holds both a BA and PhD in chemistry from UCLA and completed his postgraduate studies at Harvard University. Wudl was a professor at UCLA from 1997 to 2006, where he was also the director for both the Exotic Materials Institute and the Materials Creation Training Program. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. Prof. Wudl is currently a part of the faculty at the UCSB Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and co-director of the UCSB Center for Polymers and Organic Solids.

Dr. Linda Wudl, who received her BS in microbiology and molecular genetics in 1967, was most recently the vice president of quality and compliance at pharmaceutical giant Amgen, where she worked for more than twenty years before her retirement. She also holds an M.A. in bacteriology from Harvard University and PhD in molecular biology from SUNY Buffalo.

The Wudls have been great supporters of the department. Most notably, the Linda and Fred Wudl Term Chair was started with a pledge from the Wudls in 2005 to support outstanding faculty in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. By enabling the department to appoint either a junior or senior faculty member to the chair, the Wudls provided UCLA Chemistry & Biochemistry with the maximum flexibility in attracting outstanding scholars at any stage of their careers. The department is delighted to honor the Wudls.

2014 UCLA Seaborg Symposium

2014 UCLA Seaborg Symposium Award Dinner

Congratulations to the Poster Session Winners!

On Saturday, November 15, 2014, a poster session was held as part of the 2014 Seaborg Symposium. The two categories of posters, undergraduate chemistry & postdoc/graduate chemistry, were judged separately. The winners were announced by Dean Joseph Rudnick at the evening banquet and awards ceremony. 

Postdoc/Graduate Student Winners

Undergraduate Student Winners

2014 UCLA Seaborg Symposium Poster Session