“Computation and Experiment: Collaborations for Chemical and Biochemical Discovery”

On Saturday, October 26, 2013,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2013 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Kendall N. Houk, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry, Saul Winstein Chair
in Organic Chemistry, UCLA

Many thanks to our generous donors
who made this event possible!



2013 Seaborg Symposium Program

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


Neil K. Garg, Ph.D.
Professor and Vice Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Session I Co-Chair


Anastassia N. Alexandrova, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Session I Co-Chair


Robert H. Grubbs, Ph.D.
2005 Nobel Prize Recipient, Victor and Elizabeth Atkins Professor of Chemistry, California Institute of Technology
“Design and Applications of Selective Olefin Metathesis: The Interplay of Theory and Experiments”


William L. Jorgensen, Ph.D. 
Sterling Professor of Chemistry, Director, Division of Physical Sciences & Engineering, Yale University
“Drug Discovery Accelerated by Computational Methods”


Paul A. Wender, Ph.D. 
Bergstrom Professor of Chemistry, Stanford University
“30 Years with Ken: New Reactions, the Ideal Synthesis & Transformative Therapies”


David S. Eisenberg, Ph.D. 
Distinguished Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Director, UCLA-DOE Institute for Genomics & Proteomics, Paul D. Boyer Professor of Molecular Biology & Biochemistry
Session II Chair


Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Ph.D. 
T.Z. and Irmgard Chu Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at UC Berkeley, HHMI Investigator, and Senior Faculty Scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
“Bioorthogonal Chemistry: From Mechanism to Organism”


David Baker, Ph.D.
Professor of Biochemistry, University of Washington, HHMI Investigator
“Challenges in Enzyme Design”


Ken N. Houk, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry, Saul Winstein Chair in Organic Chemistry, UCLA
“Computations, Collaborations, and the Distortion/Interaction Model of Biomolecular Reactivity”

Kendall N. Houk Biography

Kendall (Ken) N. Houk received A.B., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees at Harvard, working with R. B. Woodward as a graduate student in the area of experimental tests of orbital symmetry selection rules. He taught at Louisiana State University, the University of Pittsburgh, and UCLA since 1986. From 1988-1990, he was Director of the Chemistry Division of the National Science Foundation. He was Chairman of the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry from 1991-1994, and became the Saul Winstein Chair in Organic Chemistry in 2009.
Professor Houk is an authority on theoretical and computational organic chemistry, beginning as an experimental organic chemist and now on the forefront of the application of computation and theory to understand and predict chemical and biological reactivity. He collaborates prodigiously with chemists all over the world and has published nearly 900 articles and given named lectures throughout the United States.

Among his honors are the von Humboldt Foundation U.S. Senior Scientist Award, and Arthur C. Cope Scholar, James Flack Norris Award in Physical Organic Chemistry, Computers in Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Award, the Tolman Medal, and the Arthur C. Cope Award, all from the American Chemical Society. He was awarded the Schrödinger Medal of the WATOC, the Faculty Research Lectureship at UCLA, the Bruylants Chair from the University of Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium, the Dr. rer. nat. h. c. from the University of Essen, Germany, an Erskine Fellowship in New Zealand, a Lady Davis Fellow at the Technion in Haifa, Israel, a JSPS Fellow in Japan and this year won the Robert Robinson Award of the UK Royal Society of Chemistry. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Sciences, and the National Academy of Sciences. He has been named as Fellow of the AAAS, WATOC, ACS, and RSC.

Professor Houk has served on the boards of a variety of funding agencies and journals, including NIH Study Sections and the PRF Advisory Board. He was Chair of the Chemistry Section of the AAAS, and is now a Senior Editor of Accounts of Chemical Research. He was Director of the UCLA Chemistry-Biology Interface Training Program from 1999 until 2011, and is a member of the UCLA Molecular Biology Institute and California NanoSystems Institute.

Our Donors

Many thanks to the generous donors whose contributions make the 2013 Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium and Medal Dinner possible
(in alphabetical order):

Our Corporate Donors

Amgen
Celgene Corporation

Our Individual Donors

Edward Aitken
Anne Andrews
Jim Bowie
Steve & Cathy Clarke
Miguel Garcia-Garibay & Beatriz Ruiz Silva
William & Nina Gelbart
Ken Houk & Robin Garrell
Grazyna Orzechowska
Emil & Hanna Reisler
Arlene & Christopher Russell
Jeff Schwartzmann
Sharlene Weatherwax

Recorded videos from the event

Symposium Photos

Medal Dinner Photos

On Saturday, Oct. 26, 2013, a poster session was held as part of the 2013 Seaborg Symposium. The two categories of posters, undergraduate chemistry & postdoc/graduate chemistry, were judged separately. The winners were announced by Dean Joseph Rudnick (center) at the evening banquet and awards ceremony.

Postdoc/Graduate Student Winners

Undergraduate Student Winners


Poster Session Photos

“Can Scientists Make the World a Better Place through Discovery, Dissemination, and Application of Knowledge?”

On Friday, December 7, 2012,
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2012 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Harold Varmus, M.D.
Director of the National Cancer Institute and
1989 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine
(with Michael Bishop)



2012 Seaborg Symposium Speakers (Program)

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


Professor Harold Varmus, M.D.
Director, National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Introduction: “The Discovery, Dissemination,
and Application of Scientific Knowledge”


Professor Levi Garraway, M.D., Ph.D. 
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
Discovery of Scientific Knowledge:
“The Cancer Genome in Biology and Therapy”


Professor Michael Eisen, Ph.D.
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, University of California, Berkeley
Dissemination of Scientific Knowledge:
“Building a Public Library of Science”


Professor Prabhat Jha, M.D., Ph.D.
Centre for Global Health Research, University of Toronto
Application of Scientific Knowledge:
“Advancing Science to Improve Health of the Global Poor”


Professor Harold Varmus, M.D. 
Director, National Cancer Institute
“How the National Cancer Institute is Trying to Make
the World a Better Place”

2012 UCLA Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium

Many thanks to the generous donors whose contributions
make the 2012 Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium and Medal Dinner possible:

Amgen
Kathy Bailey
Charles & Carolyn Knobler
Larry & Suzanne Margerum
Mojdeh Joy Sadeghpour-Bruce
Stan Schein
Roberts & Adela Smith
Barbara Swartz
William & Karen Timberlake

Student Dinner Support:

Kathy Bailey
Cathy & Steve Clarke
James & Diana Fraser
Atsuko & Akira Fujimoto
Miguel Garcia-Garibay & Beatriz Ruiz Silva
Robin Garrell & Ken Houk
William & Nina Gelbart
Janet Marott
Elizabeth Neufeld
Irene Nordquist Sahyun
Greg Payne
Emil & Hanna Reisler
Arlene & Christopher Russell
Melville Sahyun
Argus Sun
Barbara Swartz

“The Heck Reaction and Cross-Couplings”

On Saturday, November 5, 2011
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2011 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Richard Heck, Ph.D.
Willis F. Harrington Professor Emeritus of Chemistry and Biochemistry,
University of Delaware, and winner of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

 

Click here to view more photos from the event

RICHARD F. HECK: NOBEL LAUREATE IN CHEMISTRY

Richard F. Heck was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.A. on August 15, 1931. The only son of a housewife and a salesman, he moved to Los Angeles, California at the age of eight. His passion for chemistry began in his early teens and stemmed naturally from his interest in growing orchids. His interest developed throughout high school and culminated in his majoring in Chemistry at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He received his bachelor’s degree in 1952 and immediately commenced his graduate studies under the supervision of Professor Saul Winstein. Heck was drawn to the complexity and versatility of the area and particularly enjoyed the “way you can make all sorts of compounds”. He received his Ph.D. in 1954 in physical organic chemistry, and his main research area was neighboring group participation in the solvolysis of arylsulfonates. A National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship took him to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, where he worked with Professor Vladimir Prelog, who became a 1975 Nobel Laureate. During his one year stay he carried out research on the solvolysis of medium sized cycloalkyl arylsulfonates. In 1955, Heck returned to UCLA and continued his research on neighboring group effects, an area which is now included in all organic chemistry textbooks.

In 1956, Heck went to work for the Hercules Powder Co. (now Ashland Inc.) at their research center in Wilmington, Delaware. His strong physical organic chemistry background undoubtedly influenced their decision to hire the then 25 year old. His first project involved working on the development of a commercial process for producing polymers using Ziegler-Natta catalysts (this process is still used today to produce large volumes of rubbers and plastics). Although Heck accomplished “little of scientific value in the two years that I was in this program” the experience he gained in transition metal chemistry would prove to be invaluable in his next project. In a defining moment, his supervisor, Dr. David Breslow, suggested that Heck “do something with transition metals”. Few could have foreseen that this suggestion would transform modern organic chemistry and give rise to the vast and important field of transition metal catalysis.

Figure 1. Richard F. Heck in the laboratory

In 1958 organotransition metal chemistry was still in its infancy. There were several important transition metal-catalyzed processes used commercially, but very little was known about the actual chemistry involved. Heck’s initial idea was to investigate the chemistry in one of these processes and to use this knowledge in the development of new chemical transformations. This work began with an investigation of the hydroformylation process, which ultimately resulted in a mechanistic rationalization of this reaction. Today Heck’s work on the hydroformylation reaction is widely regarded as the first correct transition metal-catalyzed reaction mechanism. This was a significant achievement and provides an excellent insight into the way Heck approached his research. At a time when most people saw transition metal catalysis as a ‘black box’ (an unknown method that could be used to aid certain chemical processes), Heck concerned himself with finding out what was inside the box (i.e. how these reactions worked) and using this information to discover new chemistry.

Despite the discovery of many new chemical reactions based on his newfound mechanistic understanding, Heck had no idea how Hercules could profit from these discoveries. This forced Heck to take his research in a new direction and, once again, it was a discussion with a colleague that would dictate Heck’s next move.

Pat Henry, who worked in the laboratory opposite Heck, was studying the mechanism of the industrially important Wacker Process. Heck was intrigued by Henry’s notion that decomposition of the intermediate palladium species occurred via a ß-hydrogen elimination. Heck then proceeded to “see what would happen” if an organopalladium species, which lacked a ß-hydrogen, was prepared in the presence of another molecule. His very first experiment was an overwhelming success (Figure 2). In a description of this seminal study Heck stated that he added “phenylmercuric acetate to a stirred solution of tetrachloropalladate…under an atmosphere of ethylene. An immediate reaction occurred. Palladium metal precipitated and ethylene gas was rapidly absorbed. Analysis of the reaction mixture showed that about an 80% yield of the styrene and 10% yield of trans-stilbene had been formed.”

This was an incredible finding and marked the discovery of a new carboncarbon bond forming reaction, which we today know as the Heck reaction. Heck then proceeded to systematically investigate the unique reactivity of these organopalladium compounds with carbon monoxide, alkenes and dienes. This work was documented in a remarkable series of seven consecutive articles in the highly regarded Journal of the American Chemical Society. Of great synthetic importance was the compatibility of these processes with almost all common organic functional groups. However, the reaction had a number of significant drawbacks. It required the use of highly toxic mercury or tin salts and stoichiometric amounts of expensive palladium, two factors which significantly limited the usefulness of this reaction. These issues became the focus of Heck’s next research phase.

Figure 2. Heck’s seminal olefin arylation experiment.

In 1971, Heck left Hercules and accepted a faculty position at the University of Delaware. Over the next few years Heck worked towards developing conditions to make the reaction more ‘user friendly’. Inspired by reports on the successful formation of the haloaryl palladium-phosphine complexes, Heck explored whether these intermediates could replace the problematic stoichiometric arylmercury-palladium combination. He also investigated the effects of certain bases on the reaction, which led to the development of a reaction that was catalytic in the amount of palladium required. This discovery, reported in 1972, formed the basis for a number of systematic studies on the application of this reaction in organic synthesis. Today, this reaction is known by chemists all over the world as the Heck reaction (or Heck-Mizoroki reaction). In addition to the discovery of the Heck reaction, Heck and his team also invented three other very useful palladiumcatalyzed carbon-carbon bond forming reactions over the next few years. The palladium-catalyzed arylation of alkynes was reported by Heck in 1975 and later that year Sonogashira reported that the addition of copper salts resulted in a faster reaction. This reaction is known today as the Sonogashira reaction and is one of the premier methods for functionalizing alkynes. Heck also developed a novel carbonylative methodology for the preparation of aryl carboxylic acid derivatives from an aryl halide, a nucleophile and carbon monoxide. Finally, Heck reported the coupling of vinylboronic acid with acrylates. This can be seen as a precursor of the extremely important Suzuki coupling and the oxidative Heck reaction.

Figure 3. Professor Heck lecturing in the classroom, University of Delaware.

The importance of the Heck reaction grew slowly among organic and medicinal chemists. The current impact of Heck’s discoveries can be clearly seen by performing a full text search in a chemical database. A search of Heck’s name in SciFinder gives 1,298 hits for the years 2000−2005 and 3,845 for 2005–2011 (as of April 27, 2011). The continued development and use of the Heck reaction has now been summarized in more than 40 reviews. The first special issue of a scientific journal focusing only on the Heck reaction was published in 2006 and the first book on the Heck reaction was published in 2009. Today, the Heck reaction is an important concept and tool for all organic chemists and medicinal chemists. Organopalladium chemistry has achieved a position of prime importance through its operational simplicity, enormous compatibility with sensitive functional groups and broad applicability, from materials science to the synthesis of drug candidates and approved drugs. Almost all sub-disciplines of modern organic chemistry have benefited from advances in the field. Heck’s work can be regarded as a precursor to a number of other Pd-catalyzed cross-couplings, including those with boronic acids (known as the Suzuki cross-coupling), organotin (known as the Stille cross-coupling), organonickel compounds (known as the Kumada-Corriu cross-coupling), organozinc compounds (known as the Negishi cross-coupling) and organosilicon compounds (known as the Hiyama cross-coupling), and linkages with alcohols and amines. Undergraduate students learn about the Heck reaction and perform experiments based on it in the laboratory. Process chemists perform palladium-catalyzed reactions in the large scale manufacture of fine chemicals, fragrances, pesticides and pharmaceuticals. Of all the chemistry developed by Heck, maybe the greatest social impact has been from the Pd-mediated coupling between an alkyne with an aryl halide. This is a reaction that is used for fluorescence labeling of DNA bases, which has contributed to the automation of DNA sequencing and sequencing of the genome. Heck’s work has motivated thousands of researchers to explore the unique possibilities of palladium catalysis in their own work. Richard Heck laid the foundation for virtually all the metalcatalyzed coupling reactions that are an essential component of modern organic synthesis.

Figure 4. Professor Richard F. Heck, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Delaware

After an extraordinary and prolific career, Richard F. Heck, the Willis F. Harrington Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, retired from the University of Delaware in 1989, where he remains a Professor Emeritus. Richard Heck has published over 200 scientific papers. In 2004, the University of Delaware Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry established the Richard F. Heck Lectureship, an annual award given in recognition of significant achievement in the field of organometallic chemistry, with Heck presenting the inaugural lecture. In 2005, he became the recipient of the Wallace Carothers Award, bestowed by the Delaware section of the American Chemical Society, which recognizes creative applications of chemistry that have had substantial commercial impact. In 2006, he received the Herbert C. Brown Award for Creative Research in Synthetic Methods from the American Chemical Society. That same year he also returned to the laboratory as a visiting professor at Queen’s University, Canada. Richard Heck was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry on October 6, 2010, sharing this honor and prize with the Japanese chemists Ei-ichi Negishi and Akira Suzuki, for their work in palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions in organic synthesis. Heck received honorary recognition from the Governor of Delaware, Jack Markell, declaring May 26, 2011, as the State of Delaware’s “Richard Heck Day”. Richard now lives in Quezon City, Philippines, with his wife, Socorro, whom he met at a Manila restaurant while visiting the Philippines in 1979. Richard’s life has now come full circle and just as he did as a teenager in Los Angeles, he spends his spare time growing orchids. Richard F. Heck will receive the 2011 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal on November 5, 2011, presented by the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, in honor of individuals making significant contributions to chemistry and biochemistry.

Biography source:
Odell, L. R., and Larhed, M., “Richard F. Heck: Nobel Laureate in Chemistry,” The Nobel Foundation 2010. http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2010/heck-bio.pdf

2011 Seaborg Symposium Speakers

Welcome and Introduction of Professor Richard Heck
Professor Albert Courey
Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry


Session I Chair:
Professor Ken Houk
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry


Professor Craig Merlic
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Palladium-Catalyzed Cyclization Strategies: Avoiding the High Energy Oxidative Addition Step”


Professor Barry Trost
Tamaki Professor of Humanities and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Stanford University
“On the Invention of Pd Catalyzed Reactions for Enabling Chemical Synthesis”


Professor Paula Diaconsescu
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Unique Advantages of Organometallic Supporting Ligands”


Session II Chair:
Professor Patrick Harran
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry


Professor Stephen Buchwald
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
“Pd-Catalyzed Carbon-Nitrogen and Carbon-Carbon Bond-Forming Reactions: Progress, Applications and Mechanistic Studies”


Professor Neil Garg
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Cross-Coupling Reactions of Unconventional Electrophiles”


Professor Larry Overman
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine
“The Intramolecular Heck Reaction: A Remarkably Versatile Transformation for Forming Complex Polycyclic Structures”


Concluding Remarks
Professor Ken Houk
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry

2011 Seaborg Symposium Program

Symposium:
California NanoSystems Institute (CNS
I) Auditorium, UCLA
11:00 a.m. Alpha Chi Sigma Poster Session (CNSI lobby)
1:15 p.m. Welcome and Introduction of Professor Richard Heck
Professor Albert Courey
Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
1:20 p.m. Session I Chair:
Professor Ken Houk
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
1:30 p.m.
Professor Craig Merlic
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Palladium-Catalyzed Cyclization Strategies: Avoiding the High Energy Oxidative Addition Step”
1:50 p.m.
2:40 p.m. Professor Paula Diaconsescu
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Unique Advantages of Organometallic Supporting Ligands”
3:00 p.m. Coffee Break (CNSI lobby)
3:15 p.m. Session II Chair:
Professor Patrick Harran
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
3:30 p.m.
4:20 p.m.

Professor Neil Garg
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
“Cross-Coupling Reactions of Unconventional Electrophiles”
4:40 p.m.
Professor Larry Overman
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine
“The Intramolecular Heck Reaction: A Remarkably Versatile Transformation for Forming Complex Polycyclic Structures”
5:30 p.m. Concluding Remarks
Professor Ken Houk
UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Dinner and Medal Awarding:
UCLA Covel Commons

6:30 p.m. Reception ♦ 7:30 p.m. Dinner ♦ 8:30 p.m. Program

Alpha Chi Sigma Poster Session Information

All chemistry and biochemistry majors who participate in research at UCLA as well as all graduate students and postdocs in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry are invited by the Beta Gamma Chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma to participate in the AXE Poster Session at the 2011 Seaborg Symposium.

The Poster Session and Seaborg Symposium includes a free dinner, followed by the awards ceremony honoring Dr. Richard Heck. The venue itself, at the California Nano Systems Institute (CNSI), is a great place to share and discuss your research and findings with peers and faculty. There will also be exciting talks by esteemed faculty members from UCLA, Stanford, MIT and UCI.

Important Things To Know:

  • Abstract submissions are due by Friday, October 28, 2011
  • Submit your abstract here! You will automatically be registered for the symposium when you submit your abstract.
  • The poster session will take place in the CNSI Lobby from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
  • Poster set up will take place from 10:30 – 11:00 a.m.
  • Stands and tacks will be provided.
  • Each poster session participant is invited to the evening banquet and awards ceremony free of change and is invited to bring a guest free of charge.
  • A comprehensive list of general poster guidelines and a list of printing resources can be found at http://www.ugeducation.ucla.edu/urc-care/confspd_workshops.htm.

Winners will receive the following prizes for their achievements:

Grand prize winner: $700

Second place: $500

Third place: $300

The winners, as judged by a team of faculty and graduate student AXE members, will be determined by their originality, perseverance, good research methods, poster design and research presentation.

Undergraduate and Graduate Student/Postdoc posters will be judged in two separate categories and prizes will be awarded in each category.

Abstract Guidelines:

  • Abstract Title (200 characters limit including spaces)
  • List of Authors
  • Abstract (2000 characters limit including spaces)

Submission and registration is due by October 28th. Participants will receive a confirmation email from AXE a few days after the abstract is submitted.
In addition to funding the prizes, Alpha Chi Sigma offers help in preparing posters including general and in-depth planning. For more information about the poster session please visit the AXE office at 1275 Young Hall or send an email to alphachisigma@gmail.com. Please direct your questions regarding the Seaborg Symposium via e-mail to seaborg@chem.ucla.edu

Many thanks to the generous donors whose contributions
make the 2011 Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium and Medal Dinner possible:

Amgen
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Boehringer Ingelheim
Genentech
Gilead
Pfizer
Vertex

Student Dinner Support:

Edward Aitken
Kathy Bailey
Ralph & Charlene Bauer
Paula Diaconescu
Miguel A. Garcia-Garibay
Robin Garrell & Ken Houk
Eileen Hing
Herbert Kaesz
Richard Kaner
Charles & Carolyn Knobler
Ohyun Kwon
Yung-Ya Lin
Heather Maynard
Paul Ornstein
Arlene Russell
Santa Monica Community College
Robert & Elizabeth Scott
Jane Strouse
Paul Weiss & Anne Andrews

“Transcription, Stem Cells, and Differentiation”

On Saturday, November 13, 2010
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the 2010 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Robert Tjian, Ph.D.
President, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Professor, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology,
University of California, Berkeley

 

 

The 2010 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal was presented to Robert Tjian, Ph.D., President, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Professor, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley. The symposium and medal dinner were held on November 13, 2010. The theme of the symposium was “Transcription, Stem Cells, and Differentiation”. In addition to Professor Tjian, speakers included Professors Kathrin Plath (UCLA Department of Biological Chemistry), Konrad Hochedlinger (Harvard Stem Cell Institute & Howard Hughes Medical Institute), and Steven L. McKnight (University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center).

Click here to view more photos from the event

Robert Tjian Biography

Robert Tjian has made major contributions to the understanding of how genes work during three decades on the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley. He has been a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator since 1987, and was appointed president of the institute in 2009. HHMI is the second wealthiest philanthropic organization in the United States and the second best endowed medical research foundation in the world. As the President of HHMI, Tjian oversees its $14 billion endowment, the income from which provides support for approximately 350 HHMI investigators, including 13 Nobel Laureates and 141 members of the National Academy of Sciences, at universities across the nation.

Robert Tjian, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1978

In his own laboratory, Tjian researches the biochemical steps that control how genes are turned on and off, steps that are key to the process of decoding the human genome. He discovered proteins called transcription factors that bind to specific sites in DNA and play a critical role in controlling how genetic information is transcribed and translated into the thousands of biomolecules that control the growth and development of cells, tissues, and organisms. Tjian’s laboratory has illuminated the relationship between disruptions in the process of transcription and human diseases such as cancer, diabetes, and Huntington’s disease. More recently, he has begun studying how transcription factors control the differentiation of embryonic stem cells into muscle, liver, and neurons. His most recent interest is in the development of new approaches to image biochemical activities in living cells.

Tjian was born in Hong Kong, the youngest of nine children. His family fled China before the Communist Revolution and eventually settled in New Jersey. Known as a voracious consumer of scientific information and data, Tjian famously talked his way into the biochemistry laboratory of the late Daniel Koshland (the 2000 Seaborg medalist) as a Berkeley undergraduate—even though he had not yet taken a single biochemistry course.

Tjian went on to receive a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Berkeley in 1971 and a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1976. After completing a postdoctoral fellowship at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory with James Watson, he joined the Berkeley faculty in 1979. At Berkeley, Tjian assumed a variety of leadership roles, including spearheading a major campus initiative to support and implement new paradigms for bioscience teaching and research. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and has received many awards honoring his scientific contributions, including the Alfred P. Sloan Prize from the General Motors Cancer Research Foundation and the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University. He was named California Scientist of the Year in 1994.

Tjian and his wife Claudia, an attorney, have two daughters, Alexis (a 1997 UCLA graduate) and Lindsey.

2010 Seaborg Symposium Speakers

Welcome & Session Chair I:
Professor Albert Courey
Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry


Professor Kathrin Plath
UCLA Department of Biological Chemistry
“Molecular Events in Reprogramming to Induced Pluripotency”


Professor Konrad Hochedlinger
Principal Faculty Member, Harvard Stem Cell Institute and Early Career Scientist,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
“Mechanisms of Cellular Reprogramming”


Session II Chair:
Professor Stephen Smale
UCLA Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics


Professor Steven L. McKnight
University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center, Distinquished Chair in Basic Biomedical Research,
Sam G. Winstead and F. Andrew Bell Distinquished Chair in Biochemistry
“Discovery of a Pro-Neurogenic, Neuroprotective Chemical”


Professor Robert Tjian
President, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Professor, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology,
University of California, Berkeley
“Unexpected Mechanisms of Transcriptional Control Driving
ES Cell Pluripotency and Differentiation”

Many thanks to the generous donors whose contributions
make the 2010 Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium and Medal Dinner possible:

Genentech
The Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation
Ed Penhoet, Ph.D.
The Siebel Foundation

Student Dinner Support:

Ralph & Charlene Bauer
Steven & Catherine Clarke
Atsuko & Akira Fujimoto
Ken Houk & Robin Garrell
Charles & Carolyn Knobler
Kim June
Janet Marott
Emil & Hanna Reisler
Arlene Russell
Theodore Sabir
Melville & Irene Sahyun
Robert & Elizabeth Scott
Roberts & Adela Smith
Bart & Kathy Tendick
Sharlene Weatherwax
Paul Weiss & Anne Andrews
Todd Yeates

“Advanced Materials and Nano-Technology”

On Saturday, November 14, 2009
the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
awarded the The 2009 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal to

Mostafa A. El-Sayed, Ph.D.
Julius Brown Chair and Regents Professor
Director, Laser Dynamics Laboratory
Georgia Institute of Technology

 

 

Click here to view photos from the event

The Glenn T. Seaborg Medal was presented to Mostafa A. El-Sayed, UCLA Chemistry & Biochemistry Professor Emeritus, Georgia Tech Julius Brown Chair and Regents Professor, and Director, Laser Dynamics Laboratory. The symposium and medal dinner were held on November 14, 2009. The theme of the symposium was “Advanced Materials and Nano-Technology.” In addition to Professor El-Sayed, speakers included Professors A. Paul Alvisatos (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at UC Berkeley), Professor Paul Barbara (Director of the Center for Nano & Molecular Science and Technology at University of Texas, Austin), Professor Zhong Lin Wang (Director of the Center for Nanostructure Characterization, Georgia Tech), and Professor Ahmed Zewail (Arthur Amos Noyes Lab of Chemical Physics, CalTech).

Mostafa A. El-Sayed Biography

El-Sayed was presented a 2007 National Medal of Science medal by President George Bush at the 2008 ceremony at the White House.

Dr. Mostafa El-Sayed, a native-born Egyptian, received his B.Sc. at Ain Shams University (1953) in Cairo, Egypt, and his Ph.D. degree at Florida State University (1958) in Tallahassee, Florida. After doing postdoctoral work at Yale, Harvard, and CalTech, he joined the faculty at UCLA in 1961. In 1994, he moved to Georgia Tech and became the Julius Brown Chair, Regents Professor, and the Director of the Laser Dynamics Laboratory.

El-Sayed has published over 500 papers in peer-reviewed journals, delivered over 50 endowed lectures and over 250 invited or plenary talks at national and international conferences. He has supervised the research of over 80 Ph.D students and over 50 postdoctoral fellows. His research covers the fields of molecular dynamics in systems ranging from gaseous molecules to condensed crystalline, amorphous, and biological systems. His group has contributed significantly to the field of semiconductor nano-crystals, as well as transition and noble metal particles and their applications in nano-(shape-dependent) catalysis and nano-(surface plasmon) photonics. Most recently he has exploited the use of antibody-conjugated metal nanoparticles for cancer diagnostics and photothermal therapy.

El-Sayed is an elected member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (1980), an elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, an Associate member of the Third World Academy of Science, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and of the American Physical Society. In 1980 he was appointed Editor of the Journal of Physical Chemistry and – over the course of the following 25 years – inspired and shepherded its transformation into one of the premier interdisciplinary research journals in the world. He has received the 1990 King Faisal International Prize in Science, as well as a number of national awards such as the Fresenius, the Tolman, the Richards medal, and numerous other American Chemical Society local section awards. In 2002, he received the American Chemical Society Langmuir National Award in Chemical Physics (2001). He has also been recognized by a number of honorary doctors degrees from different international universities, was a Fairchild visiting professor at CalTech, a Senior von Humboldt Fellow in West Germany, and a Miller Visiting Professor at UC Berkeley. In 2007 he was named the Distinguished Professor of the Year at Georgia Tech. In 2008, he received the USA National Medal of Science from the President of the United States, and in 2009 he received the Medal of the Republic of the first class from the President of Egypt.

2009 Seaborg Symposium Speakers

Welcome:
Professor Albert Courey
Professor & Chair, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemisty


Session I Chair:
Professor Paul S. Weiss
Director, California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA
Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry


Professor Ahmed Zewail
California Institute of Technology, Chemistry & Physics, 1999 Nobel Laureate
“4D Microscopy: Visualizing Materials and Biological Function”


Professor Zhong L. Wang
Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Materials Science and Engineering
“Harvesting Biomechanical Energy by Nanogenerators”


Professor Paul Barbara
University of Texas at Austin, Chemistry
“A Molecular Level Understanding of Charge & Energy Transfer
Dynamics in Solid-State Conjugated Polymeric Materials”


Session II Chair:
Professor Sarah Tolbert
Professor, UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemisty


Professor A. Paul Alivisatos
University of California at Berkeley, Chemistry & Materials Science
“Nanoscale Photovoltaics and Photosynthesis Materials”


Professor Mostafa El-Sayed
Georgia Institute of Technology
“Properties and Applications of Photons Captured Photons by Gold Nanoparticles in Materials Science and Cancer Research”

Many thanks to the generous donors whose contributions
make the Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium and Medal Dinner possible:

2009 Donors

Aerospace Corporation
Allergan, Inc.
Amgen, Inc.
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
Bruker Instruments Inc.
Clarity Therapeutics Consulting
FEI

“Frontiers in Metallobiochemistry”

The 2008 Glenn T. Seaborg Symposium

honouring

Joan Selverstone Valentine
University of California, Los Angeles

“Frontiers in Metallobiochemistry”

  • Professor Harry B. Gray, Caltech
    “Electron flow through proteins”
  • Professor Yi Lu, University of Illinois
    “Exploring the colorful world of metalloproteins:
    designing red, green, blue, yellow and purple
    copper proteins with redox and catalytic functions”
  • Professor Sabeeha Merchant, UCLA
    “Between a rock and a hard place: trace metal homeostasis in Chlamydomonas”
  • Professor Joan S. Valentine, UCLA
    “Tales of dioxygen: life in a toxic gas”

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2008

in The California NanoSystems Institute Auditorium, UCLA
1:30-5:30 p.m.
ADMISSION FREE, Parking $9
Reservations requested
(310) 267-5123
callen@chem.ucla.edu

“Making and Using Functional Nanostructures”

2007 Seaborg Symposium and Medal Presentation Dinner

Honoring

Dr. R. Stanley Williams
Hewlett-Packard Research Laboratories

Saturday, November 3, 2007

  • 1:30-5:30 – SYMPOSIUM -The California NanoSystems Institute Auditorium
  • 6:30 Reception – Covel Commons
  • 7:30 Dinner – Covel Commons
  • 8:30 Program – Covel Commons

About R. Stanley Williams

R. Stanley Williams is an HP Senior Fellow at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories and founding Director (since 1995) of the HP Quantum Science Research (QSR) group. He received a B.A. degree in Chemical Physics in 1974 from Rice University and his Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from U.C. Berkeley in 1978. He was a Member of Technical Staff at the AT & T Bell Labs from 1978-80 and a faculty member (Assistant, Associate and Full Professor) of the Chemistry and Biochemistry Department at UCLA from 1980-1995. His primary scientific research during the past thirty years has been in the areas of solid-state chemistry and physics, and their applications to technology. This has evolved into the areas of nanostructures and chemically-assembled materials, with an emphasis on the thermodynamics of size and shape. Most recently, he has examined the fundamental limits of information and computing, which has led to his current research in nano-electronics and nano-photonics. He has received numerous awards for business, scientific and academic achievement, including the 2004 Herman Bloch Medal for Industrial Research, the 2000 Julius Springer Award for Applied Physics, the 2000 Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology, a Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and a Sloan Foundation Fellowship. He has been awarded fifty-seven US patents with more than forty pending, and he has published over 300 papers in professional scientific journals. One of his patents was named as one of five that will “transform business and technology” by MIT’s Technology Review in 2000. He has presented hundreds of invited plenary, keynote and named lectures at international scientific, technical and business events, including the 2003 Joseph Franklin Lecture at Rice University, the 2004 Debye Lectures at Cornell University, the 2004 Bloch Lecture at the University of Chicago, and the 2005 Carreker Engineering Lecture at Georgia Tech.

Program

1:30 p.m. Welcome
  Harold G., Martinson, Department Chair
   
1;35 P.M. Sarah Tolbert, Session Chair I
   
1:40 p.m.
   
2:25 p.m.
   
3:10 p.m. Break and Poster Session
   
3:45 p.m. Leonard Rome, Session Chair II
   
3:50 p.m.
   
4:35 p.m.
   
5:20 p.m. Closing Remarks
  Harold G. Martinson, Department Chair