Iain Cheeseman

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CitizenshipUSA
AwardsHarold W. Weintraub Graduate Student Award, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (2003)
Fellow, Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research (2003)
Kerr Award for Research Excellence, Ludwig Institute (2004)
Smith Family New Investigator Award (2007)
Iain Cheeseman
CitizenshipUSA
Alma materDuke University
Known forKinetochore research
AwardsHarold W. Weintraub Graduate Student Award, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (2003)
Fellow, Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research (2003)
Kerr Award for Research Excellence, Ludwig Institute (2004)
Smith Family New Investigator Award (2007)
Scientific career
FieldsBiochemistry
InstitutionsLudwig Institute for Cancer Research University of California, San Diego
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research (Cambridge, MA)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Iain Cheeseman[1] investigates the role of the kinetochore, a group of proteins required for cell division and chromosome segregation. This core network of proteins facilitates the attachment of chromosomes to microtubule polymers—the spindle structures that attach to the ends of cells, pulling and dividing them during cell division. The kinetochore is critical to ensuring duplication without loss or damage to the genetic material. Cheeseman is also investigating the activities of the individual molecular machines that make up this structure and how these proteins are controlled and regulated.[2]

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