Saba Valadkhan

Saba Valadkhan (Persian: صبا ولدخان) is an Iranian American biomedical scientist, and an Assistant Professor and RNA researcher at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio[1]. In 2005, she was awarded the GE / Science Young Scientist Award for her breakthrough in understanding the mechanism of spliceosomes - "akin to finding the Holy Grail of the splicing catalysis field" [2] - a critical area of research, given that "20 percent or 30 percent of all human genetic diseases are caused by mistakes that the spliceosome makes".[3]

Education

Valadkhan qualified as a medical doctor at Tehran University of Medial Sciences in Iran in 1996. She moved to America to pursue her Ph.D. at Columbia University, New York[4]. In 2004, she joined as an Assistant Professor Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio[5].

Doctoral Research

Dr. Saba Valadkhan studied the role of small nuclear RNAs in the human spliceosome under the supervision of Prof. James Manley[2]. The main focus of her research is elucidating the structure and function of the catalytic core of the spliceosome by taking advantage of a novel, minimal spliceosome she recently developed. This minimal system, which consists of only two spliceosomal snRNAs, catalyzes a reaction identical to the splicing reaction. In addition to providing direct evidence for RNA catalysis in the spliceosome, and thus, settling the longstanding and central question of the identity of the catalytic domain, the minimal system provides a novel and powerful tool for studying the structure and function of the spliceosome.

Awards and Honours

Dr. Saba Valadkhan was presented with the Harold Weintraub award from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle for her doctoral thesis[4]. She was named a Searle Scholar in 2004. She was also awarded the American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS) Young Scientist Grand Prize in the same year[4]. In 2006, she became a founding member of the Rosalind Franklin Society[6]. She was also honoured with the Nsoroma Award from Cleveland Chapter of the National Technical Association in 2006.

gollark: It's not an apocalypse, just... a few percent of one?
gollark: And the computer science conspiracies, the mathematics conspiracies, the astronomy conspiracies, the entomology conspiracies, the etymology conspiracies, the rock climbing conspiracies, the nutritionist conspiracies... are we just going to ignore those?
gollark: #karens-corner-of-coronavirus-tales maybe?
gollark: Given the US government's ability to mess up everything it touches, I don't think government-paid government-run healthcare would be the best of ideas. But the insurance system is also quite terrible. There's probably an alternative possibly-better way.
gollark: You can't easily go around controlling spread neatly to just people who accept a 0.5% or whatever risk of death (which is still quite bad).

See also

  • List of famous Iranian women

References

  1. "Saba Valadkhan". Case Comprehensive Cancer Center | School of Medicine | Case Western Reserve University. 2020-05-06. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  2. "Saba Valadkhan of Case Western Reserve University Wins Young Scientist Award". www.payvand.com.
  3. "News". aaas.org.
  4. "Dr. Saba Valadkhan: A Renowned Biomedical Scientist". www.payvand.com. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  5. "Valadkhan Lab". www.valadkhanlab.org. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  6. "Home". www.rosalindfranklinsociety.org. Retrieved 2020-07-12.

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