
Often the first contact of the department, Laura provides illustrations, webpage support, data, media, photography and the department’s annual newsletter. She has a great ability to turn even the simplest, not-yet-formulated idea into a beautiful presentation.

The following student has been selected to receive an Holstrom Environmental Scholarship:
Heather Smaby, Richard Lindroth LabThe following students have been selected to receive Hilldale Undergraduate/Faculty Research Fellowships:

James Mukasa Ntambi is the winner of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Award for Exemplary Contributions to Education.
To watch a video of the talk James gave about his Uganda Project outreach click here

Congratulations 2012 Biochemistry Graduate Award Winners
Boyer Award: Zak Campbell
Liermo Award: Amber Schuh
Grad Teaching: Rachel Kubiak
Grad Teaching: Basudeb Bhattacharyya

The Royal Society of Chemistry has named Professor Ron Raines as the winner of the 2013 Jeremy Knowles Award. This annual award is "to recognize and promote the importance of inter- and multi-disciplinary research between chemistry and the life sciences".

Election to NAI Fellow status is a high professional distinction accorded to academic inventors who have demonstrated a highly prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on quality of life, economic development, and the welfare of society.

W. Wallace “Mo” Cleland January 6th 1930 - March 6th 2013
The Department of Biochemistry mourns the passing of Mo Cleland who died tragically on March 6th following a fall on ice. We will miss him greatly. We extend our condolences to his family and his vast array of scientific followers who have benefited from his clear vision of science over the past 53 years in Madison. The Department of Biochemistry is planning a celebration of his life in the Spring/Summer of 2014 and a memorial fund is being established.

The American Chemical Society- Cellulose and Renewable Materials Division has named Professor John Ralph the 2013 Anselme Payen Award winner for his outstanding contribution to their field of science.

Professor Laura Kiessling has been named the recipient of the 2013 Murray Goodman Memorial Prize. This award will recognize Dr. Kiessling's seminal contributions in the area of molecular glycobiology and carbohydrate biochemistry. The award is presented by the Biophysical Society in partnership with the ACS Division of Biological Chemistry.

Colleen Hayes, Ph.D., a nationally-recognized MS researcher and professor of biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, was inducted into the Volunteer Hall of Fame at the National Multiple Sclerosis Leadership Conference, November 8-10 in Dallas, Texas. She was inducted in the Scientific Researcher category.
For more than 25 years, Dr. Hayes has devoted a significant amount of time to studying nutrition and the immune system as well as laying the foundation for much of today’s research into the role of vitamin D in MS. She also has been involved as a research volunteer...

Congratulations Ralph Lab. The grant was received through the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program, administered by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars (CIES), to support research, teaching and sharing ideas abroad.

Cheap, simple bacteria test could spare newborns deadly infections.
"While that microbial environment in the gut is still developing, the introduction of one of many of the wrong kinds of bacteria may cause a severe immune response," says Douglas Weibel, biochemistry professor at UW-Madison. "In an infant, the immune system could just ravage the intestines."

The highest honor of the carbohydrate division of the American Chemical Society, the Hudson Award was established in 1946 to recognize outstanding contributions to carbohydrate chemistry in education, research, or applications.
Congratulations Dr. Kiessling.

In this role, Sussman will head up a small team of Biotech Center scientists that will use modern scientific tools to analyze DNA and protein from the bones, pottery, seeds and other specimens found at the site. These techniques are expected to reveal new information about what life was like for Trojans.