Miriam Escarlet Diaz Galicia successfully defended her master's thesis on May 8, 2018 for both directed research and thesis project, entitled "Engineering of Kinase-based Protein Interacting Devices: Active Expression of Tyrosine Kinase Domains".
Her research focused on application of kinase domains for the creation of a synthetic sensor device that reads low concentration protein-protein interactions and amplifies them to a higher concentration interaction which is then translated into a FRET signal.
She will be continuing her Ph.D. degree under Professor Stefan Arold.
Congratulations!
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