Catherine L. Murray
B.Sc., McGill University Some Assembly Required: Studies of Flaviviridae Capsid Proteins presented by Charles M. Rice
Catherine Murray was born in Windsor, England, and although her family was based in Canada, she spent significant periods of her childhood living in exotic venues like Papua New Guinea and Thailand. These early experiences peaked Catherine’s interest in diseases in the developing world, and virology in particular. Catherine did her undergraduate work at McGill University, graduating with honors in microbiology and immunology and garnering a long list of awards for her remarkable scholastic achievements. In addition to her courses, Catherine worked in two different virology labs, gaining experience studying herpes simplex virus and measles virus. She entered the Rockefeller University Ph.D. program and was the second student to join my lab shortly after our arrival in New York. During her thesis work, Catherine tackled three different projects on two viruses. For the animal pestivirus, bovine viral diarrhea virus, she showed that viral proteins required for replication of the viral RNA are also intimately involved in the assembly of infectious viral progeny. She followed up this work with biochemical and genetic studies on the core proteins of bovine viral diarrhea virus and hepatitis C virus. These small, highly basic proteins bind and package the viral genomic RNA. Catherine’s studies have provided the first detailed description of the core protein features that are important for infectious virus production. Science aside, Catherine, nicknamed “Cat,” was the founding Canadian in the lab and bore the brunt of a barrage of Canada jokes. Unfazed, she more than held her own demolishing adversaries with her creative and quick intellect. Catherine plans to continue in biomedical science, perhaps by merging her scientific training with her outstanding writing skills. I am sure she will succeed brilliantly at whatever she undertakes.
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The next generation In September, twenty new scientist-hopefuls will fill the gap left by this year’s graduates. Of an initial pool of 590 applicants, 12.5 percent were accepted, a number whittled down over the winter months by a screening committee overseen by the Dean’s Office and including Sean Brady, Hironori Funabiki, Charles Gilbert, Magda Konarska, James Krueger, Christian Münz, Eric Siggia, Erec Stebbins and Leslie Vosshall.
“We’ve chosen students in whom a certain quality really stands out: an intense scientific curiosity, an enthusiasm that results in a high level of commitment to research,” says Emily Harms, assistant dean.
Next year’s new students include 10 women and 10 men, from 10 countries: Argentina, Canada, Germany, Italy, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, Taiwan, the United Kingdom and the United States. Their alma maters include: Barnard College, Columbia University, Harvey Mudd College, Indiana University, Princeton University, Rhodes College, the Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden), San Raffaele University, the Technical University of Munich, the University of Bologna, the University of California, San Diego, the University of Cambridge, the University of Chicago, the University of Maryland, the University of Miami, the University of Oxford, the University of Pisa, the University of Tübingen, the University of Victoria and the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
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