Sabrina Spencer
- White House Science Official Comes to CU Anschutz for Cancer Briefing, Moonshot UpdatesArati Prabhakar, PhD, and a panel of elected officials and CU leaders shared information on the fight against cancer.Dr. Sabrina Spencer, a ñ
- From the Chroma Technology Website:This year, Chroma Technology is happy to present the Anne Heidenthal Prize for Fluorescence Research award to Prof. Sabrina Spencer from the ñ. This annual international prize is
- Sabrina L. Spencer, assistant professor of biochemistry and member of the BioFrontiers Institute at the ñ, is one of five new winners of a 2021 Damon Runyon-Rachleff Innovation Award, the Damon Runyon Cancer Research
- Congratulations to Biochemistry Professor Sabrina Spencer, recipient of a 2020 Provost Faculty Achievement Award!From the Provost’s Letter:“In selecting you for this award, the faculty committee pointed to the importance of
- When do cells decide to divide? For 40 years, the textbook answer has been that this decision occurs in the first phase of a cell’s existence – right after a mother cell divides to become daughter cells. But researchers at ñ have found that
- ñ research attracted a record $631 million in funding in fiscal year 2019 for groundbreaking studies that investigate a changing environment, explore new opportunities in space, mitigate the effects of natural hazards, advance biomedical
- NIH’s High-Risk, High-Reward Research program to fund Sabrina Spencer’s ñ research that could shed light on cancer treatmentScientists do not fully understand how cells choose between proliferation and quiescence (a state of non-
- A new ñ study has shown that some dividing human cells are “kicking the can down the road,” passing on low-level DNA damage to offspring, causing daughter cells to pause in a quiescent, or dormant, state previously thought to be random in origin.