Professor Christopher Bystroff Selected To Receive NSF Career Award
 |
| Photo by Kris Qua |
Christopher Bystroff, associate professor of biology at
Rensselaer, has been awarded a Faculty Early Career Development
Award (CAREER) from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Bystroff will use the projected five-year, $783,768 grant to
work on developing five statistical models that represent
various stages in the folding of proteins.
Bystroff is a computational biologist who creates statistical
models and molecular simulations to discover how proteins
organize and fold into unique structures. Understanding a
specific protein's folding structure helps to identify its
biological function, and therefore its role in disease.
Bystroff's work seeks to better understand the functions of
genes and genetic differences at the molecular level.
"Professor Bystroff's fundamental research into how proteins
fold will yield a better understanding of the growing number of
diseases, such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Lou Gehrig's
disease, which have been linked to the misfolding of proteins,"
said Omkaram "Om" Nalamasu, vice president for research at
Rensselaer. "His work is an example of ongoing research at
Rensselaer that seeks a better understanding of complex
diseases for medical and health applications."
Bystroff's research is incorporated into the educational
experience at Rensselaer by involving undergraduate and
graduate students in interdisciplinary research opportunities,
such as identifying sites where proteins fold and misfold.
Bystroff teaches computational biology courses at Rensselaer,
including Sequence Analysis, Molecular
Modeling, and Crystallographic Analysis of Protein
Structure. He also teaches college faculty at a
bioinformatics workshop each summer.
The CAREER Award is given to faculty members at the beginning
of their careers and is one of the NSF's most competitive and
prestigious awards, placing emphasis on high-quality research
and novel education initiatives.
Bystroff joined the Rensselaer faculty in 1999. He is a
co-founder and collaborator on research associated with the
Bioinformatics Center, a joint center between Rensselaer and
the Wadsworth Center of the New York State Department of
Health. Bystroff earned a doctoral and master's degree in
chemistry from the University of California, San Diego and
received a bachelor's degree in chemistry from Carleton
College.
Published
June 6,
2005
|