Skip to main content
University of Wisconsin–Madison
UW Crest
Department of Biochemistry
College of Agricultural and Life Sciences
  • People Expand Collapse
    • Faculty
    • Affiliates
    • Instructional Faculty
    • Honorary Fellows
    • Emeritus Faculty
    • Postdocs
  • Academics
  • Research
  • Facilities Expand Collapse
    • BCRF
    • BIF
    • Cryo-EM
    • Crystallography Core
    • NMRFAM
    • Optical Core
  • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
  • News & Events
  • About
  • Give
  • Intranet
  • Equipment
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Katie Brenner and bluDiagnostics Wins Governor’s Award

Katie Brenner and bluDiagnostics Wins Governor’s Award

Posted on June 4, 2015

Katie Brenner and the Madison startup she co-founded, bluDiagnostics, won the grand prize in the 2015 Wisconsin Governor's Business Plan contest.

Katie is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Weibel lab. Congrats Katie!

Read More

Posted in News

Post navigation

Previous post: Watch the video: Vitamin D: A Pharmaceutical Fountain – with Hector DeLuca
Next post: Khorana and Bose Programs Welcome New Students

Recent Posts

  • Cryo-ET Center to Expand as Demand for the Technology Grows
  • Allosteric mechanisms of transcriptional control in FXR
  • Research in Brief: The What, Why, and How
  • Harry Steenbock Lectures in Biochemistry
  • Weeks Earns International Proteolysis Society Young Investigator Award

Site footer content

University logo that links to main university website

Additional Links

  • Contact Info
  • Give to Biochemistry
  • Employment at Biochemistry
  • College of Agricultural and Life Sciences
  • Equipment in Biochemistry

Contact Us

  • 433 Babcock Drive
    Madison, WI 53706
  • Map map marker
  • Phone: 608-262-3040
    • facebook
    • twitter
    • youtube
    • linkedin

Website feedback, questions or accessibility issues: webmaster@biochem.wisc.edu.

Learn more about accessibility at UW–Madison.

This site was built using the UW Theme | Privacy Notice | © 2023 Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.