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Sarah Delaney

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American chemist and academic
Sarah Delaney
Alma materMiddlebury College
California Institute of Technology
Scientific career
InstitutionsBrown University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
ThesisOxidative DNA Damage by Long-Range Charge Transport (2004)
Doctoral advisorJacqueline Barton
Websitewww.brown.edu/academics/chemistry/people/faculty/sarah-delaney Edit this at Wikidata

Sarah Delaney is an American chemist who is a professor and Associate Dean of Academic Affairs at Brown University. Her research investigates DNA damage and how it is related to human disease.

Early life and education

Delaney was an undergraduate student at Middlebury College, where she majored in chemistry, researching cisplatin anti-cancer analogs. She moved to the California Institute of Technology for graduate research, where she worked alongside Jacqueline Barton on the role of DNA in charge-transfer reactions. In particular, she investigated whether the helical stack of base pairs in the double helix impact charge transport.

Research and career

After her PhD, Delaney was appointed a Damon Runyon postdoctoral fellow with John Essigmann at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she studied the mutagenicity of oxidized guanine lesions. Delaney has studied how DNA damage is related to human disease. At Brown University she serves as a professor of chemistry. In 2019. she was made director of graduate studies, and she implemented peer mentoring and regular advisor meetings for first year students, a journal club, a coffee hour and a weekly colloquium. She was made senior associate dean of academic affairs for the graduate school in 2022.

Awards and honors

Selected publications

  • Long-range DNA charge transport
  • Oxidative damage by ruthenium complexes containing the dipyridophenazine ligand or its derivatives: a focus on intercalation
  • A New Equation for Calculation of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol in Patients With Normolipidemia and/or Hypertriglyceridemia

References

  1. www.brown.edu/academics/chemistry/people/faculty/sarah-delaney Edit this at Wikidata
  2. Sarah Delaney publications from Europe PubMed Central
  3. Delaney, Sarah (2004). Oxidative DNA Damage by Long-Range Charge Transport (PhD thesis). California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/9Q0X-TZ17. OCLC 654923736. ProQuest 305200014.
  4. "Essigmann Lab".
  5. ^ "Delaney Appointed Senior Associate Dean of Academic Affairs | Graduate School". brown.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  6. "Awards and Honors". MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. July 2004. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  7. "Grantees - Outstanding New Environmental Scientist (ONES) Alumni". National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  8. "Clayton and Delaney Honored for Advising and Mentoring | Graduate School". brown.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  9. Sarah Delaney; Jacqueline K Barton (1 August 2003). "Long-range DNA charge transport". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 68 (17): 6475–6483. doi:10.1021/JO030095Y. ISSN 0022-3263. PMID 12919006. Wikidata Q35199927.
  10. Sarah Delaney; Matthias Pascaly; Pratip K Bhattacharya; Koun Han; Jacqueline K Barton (1 April 2002). "Oxidative damage by ruthenium complexes containing the dipyridophenazine ligand or its derivatives: a focus on intercalation". Inorganic Chemistry. 41 (7): 1966–1974. doi:10.1021/IC0111738. ISSN 0020-1669. PMID 11925195. Wikidata Q38290645.
  11. Maureen Sampson; Clarence Ling; Qian Sun; et al. (26 February 2020). "A New Equation for Calculation of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol in Patients With Normolipidemia and/or Hypertriglyceridemia". JAMA cardiology. doi:10.1001/JAMACARDIO.2020.0013. ISSN 2380-6583. PMC 7240357. PMID 32101259. Wikidata Q89891566.
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