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Lindsey E Mcquade

from Chicago, IL
Age ~43

Lindsey Mcquade Phones & Addresses

  • 437 W Division St APT 707, Chicago, IL 60610
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Union City, CA
  • Somerville, MA

Work

Company: University of illinois at chicago Position: Chemistry lecturer

Education

Degree: Ph.D. School / High School: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2005 to 2010 Specialities: Bio-inorganic Chemistry

Skills

Characterization • Chemistry • Fluorescence • Neuroscience • Biology • Molecular Biology • Cell • Organic Synthesis • Public Speaking • Research • Spectroscopy • Nmr Spectroscopy

Industries

Higher Education

Resumes

Resumes

Lindsey Mcquade Photo 1

Director Of Research And Graduate Resources

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Location:
Chicago, IL
Industry:
Higher Education
Work:
University of Illinois at Chicago
Chemistry Lecturer

Stanford University - Palo Alto, CA Jul 2010 - Apr 2012
Postdoctoral Fellow

MIT - Cambridge, MA Aug 2005 - Jun 2010
Graduate Student
Education:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2005 - 2010
Ph.D., Bio-inorganic Chemistry
McGill University 2000 - 2005
B.Sc., Chemistry, Biotechnology
Skills:
Characterization
Chemistry
Fluorescence
Neuroscience
Biology
Molecular Biology
Cell
Organic Synthesis
Public Speaking
Research
Spectroscopy
Nmr Spectroscopy

Publications

Us Patents

Inhibitors Of Bacterial Nitric Oxide Synthase, And Related Screening Methods

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US Patent:
20110201042, Aug 18, 2011
Filed:
Dec 17, 2008
Appl. No.:
12/808889
Inventors:
Stephen J. Lippard - Cambridge MA, US
Lindsey E. McQuade - Union City CA, US
Evgeny A. Nudler - New York NY, US
Assignee:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Cambridge MA
International Classification:
C12Q 1/02
G01N 33/00
C07D 311/82
C07D 221/06
US Classification:
435 29, 436116, 549388, 546 79
Abstract:
The invention relates in part to compounds that act as highly nitric oxide (NO)-specific turn-on fluorescent probes. The present invention also relates to the use of these fluorescein-based sensors to screen selectively for inhibitors of bacterial nitric oxide synthase (bNOS). Compounds of the present invention readily detect nitric oxide produced in vivo. Therefore they can be used in an assay that measures NO production by bNOS. Using a sensor of the invention one can screen libraries of small molecules for inhibitors of bNOS.
Lindsey E Mcquade from Chicago, IL, age ~43 Get Report