Jonathan White

Current position:

Assistant Professor at Longwood University

2017/18: Visiting assistant professor at Willamette University

Beatty lab: Postdoc (2015 - 2017)

Education:

George Fox University (B.S. in Chemistry)

University of Oregon (Ph.D. in Chemistry)

Hometown:

Portland, OR

 

Julia Doh, PhD (OHSU 2020)

Current position: Scientist at Transition Bio (Cambridge, MA)

Beatty group: PMCB/Chemical Biology Graduate Student (Spring 2015 - 2020)

Dr. Samantha Levine 

Current Position:

Research scientist at UC Irvine (2020- )

Beatty Lab position: Postdoctoral scholar and staff scientist.

Research Project:

Design and application of small molecule probes for studying the mycobacterial hydrolases

Selected Publications:

  1. K.R. Tallman, S.R. Levine, K.E. Beatty.  “Small Molecule Probes Reveal Esterases with Persistent Activity in Dormant and Reactivating Mycobacterium tuberculosis.” ACS Infectious Diseases 9(2), 936-944 (2016).

  2. K.R. Tallman, S.R. Levine, K.E. Beatty.  “Identification of active lipases in Mycobacterium tuberculosis using new far-red fluorogenic probes.”  ACS Chemical Biology 11(7), 1810-1815 (2016).

  3. S.R. Levine, K.E. Beatty.  “Synthesis of a far-red fluorophore and its use as an esterase probe in living cells.”  Chem. Commun., 52, 1835-1838 (2016).

Education:

California Institute of Technology (B.S. in Chemistry)

CSU-Fort Collins (Ph.D. in Chemistry)

Hometown:

Mahwah, New Jersey

Hannah Zane (email: zane [at] ohsu)

Current position:

Medical Student at OHSU

Beatty lab: Postdoc (2014 - 2015), Researcher (2016 - 2018)

Katie Tallman

Current Position:

Technology Specialist at McCoy Russell LLP

Beatty Lab: PMCB Graduate Student (2010 - 2016); PhD earned July 2016

Thesis Title:

The development and use of chemical tools to identify active mycobacterial esterases

Selected Publications:

  1. K.R. Tallman, S.R. Levine, K.E. Beatty.  “Small Molecule Probes Reveal Esterases with Persistent Activity in Dormant and Reactivating Mycobacterium tuberculosis.” ACS Infectious Diseases 9(2), 936-944 (2016).

  2. K.R. Tallman, S.R. Levine, K.E. Beatty.  “Identification of active lipases in Mycobacterium tuberculosis using new far-red fluorogenic probes.”  ACS Chemical Biology 11(7), 1810-1815 (2016).

  3. K.R. Tallman, K.E. Beatty.  “Far-Red Fluorogenic Probes for Esterase and Lipase Detection,” ChemBioChem, 16(1), 70-75 (2015). 

 

Education:

Western Washington University (B.S. in Biochemistry)

Hometown:

Tacoma, WA