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 91Ƶ
- 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 University of Colorado Boulder. This annual international prize is
- Sabrina L. Spencer, assistant professor of biochemistry and member of the BioFrontiers Institute at the University of Colorado Boulder, 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 91Ƶ have found that
- 91Ƶ 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 91Ƶ 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 University of Colorado Boulder 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.