Tom Cech

  • Daniel Youmans and Tom Cech
    Medical student Daniel Youmans (left) and Tom Cech (right), director of the BioFrontiers Institute, look over an image from a high-powered microscope (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ)Forty years after researchers first discovered it in fruit flies
  • RNA splicing dance
    As part of BioFrontiers Institute Professor John Rinn’s biochemistry class, this week graduate students performed an RNA splicing interpretive dance on the west lawn of the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotech Building. CU Nobel Laureate and
  • Participants of BizWest's CEO Roundtable on Life Sciences in ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ are, from left, Misha Plam, Ron Squarer, David Kerr, William Marshall, Chris Shapard, Jennifer Jones, Tin Tin Su, Pawel Fludzinski, Amy Beckley, Tom Cech, Becky Potts, Kyle Lefkoff, Tom Hertzberg, Jonathan Vaught, Marvin Caruthers, Not pictured: Brynmor Reese. BizWest/Jensen Werley.
    After years of companies being sold off or growing and relocating, ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ’s life-sciences sector is showing signs of reaching critical mass.Companies such as Clovis Oncology Inc. (Nasdaq: CLVS), SomaLogic Inc., Array Biopharma Inc. (Nasdaq: ARRY)
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    Nobel Laureate Professor Tom Cech came to the Department of Chemistry on 16th October, to give the 2017 Herchel Smith Lecture: 'Shedding some Light on the Dark Matter of the Genomic Universe.'Professor Cech is Distinguished
  • Distinguished Professor Tom Cech. Photo: Glenn Asakawa / ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ.
    ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ Distinguished Professor Tom Cech, Colorado’s first Nobel Prize winner, has been named the 2017 Hazel Barnes Prize winner – the most distinguished award a faculty member can receive from the university.Cech, the
  • Tom Cech's lab is focused, in part, on studying telomerase: a powerful enzyme found at the ends of chromosomes.
     A deep look inside the live cells reveals a key cancer process Telomerase, a powerful enzyme found at the ends of chromosomes, can keep humans healthy, or promote cancer growth. Researchers at the University of Colorado in ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ used a
  • John Milligan – photo courtesy of Gilead Sciences
    John Milligan spent two years at the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ during his graduate studies in the mid-1980’s. He helped to move his mentor, Dr. Olke Uhlenbeck, in a U-Haul truck across the Great Plains to the Rockies. Uhlenbeck was recruited
  • Telomeres sit at the ends of chromosomes to protect their genetic data (colorful DNA pic) Credit: Jane Ades, NHGRI
    Among cancers, scientists have spent their entire research careers looking for cellular similarities that may lead to a single cure for many cancers –– the rare chance to have a single answer to a multifaceted problem. In 1997, scientists discovered
  • Telomeres sit at the ends of chromosomes to protect their genetic data. Credit: Jane Ades, NHGRI
    In a new paper released today in Nature, BioFrontiers Institute scientists at the University of Colorado in ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ, Tom Cech and Leslie Leinwand, detailed a new target for anti-cancer drug development that is sitting at the ends of our
  • Tom Cech is the Director of the BioFrontiers Institute
    BioFrontiers Director attends Senate ForumSeptember’s first meeting of the Science, Technology and Policy Forum was held to zero in on a discussion of the human genome and its implications for medicine. Attendees included Dr. Ralph Cicerone,
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