
MANAGEMENT
I am an interdisciplinary researcher, scholar, and educator with a penchant for challenging problems (like protein folding). I believe the most direct way into students minds is through their stomachs and that the greatest thing I can teach a student is how to learn for themselves. I fervently believe that science should be for everyone and try each day to make it so.
Post-doctoral training in Biochemistry at UC Berkeley. Advisors: Susan Marqusee and Jamie H.D. Cate
Ph.D. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from UCLA. Advisor: Shimon Weiss
B.A. in Molecular and Cell Biology-Biochemistry from UC Berkeley. Advisors: Daniel E. Koshland Jr, Robert M. Glaeser, and Kenneth H. Downing
Research in the Hamadani Lab centers on the study of protein folding and dynamics using single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer. This research is highly interdisciplinary and involves non-standard amino acid (NSAA) tagging of proteins within purified and reconstituted in-vitro translation systems (synthetic biochemistry), the bioconjugation of bright and photostable single molecule dyes efficiently onto these NSAA tags using click chemistry (chemical biology), and finally reading out the bioconformational state of the target biomolecules one at a time using ultrasensative fluorescence microscopes (biophysics).
CHEM 105: General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry
CHEM 105L: General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Lab
CHEM 300: Literature in Chemistry
CHEM 341: General Biochemistry
CHEM 351: Biochemistry
CHEM 351L: Biochemistry Lab
Associate Professor, Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, California State University San Marcos
2002-2008 Ph.D., Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of California, Los Angeles. Graduate advisor:
Dr. Shimon Weiss. Dissertation Title: Non-equilibrium single molecule protein folding
1997-2001 B.A., Molecular and Cellular Biology-Biochemistry, University of California, Berkeley, Primary
Undergraduate advisors: Drs. Robert M. Glaeser and Kenneth H. Downing. Thesis title: 2D-electron
crystallography of a metastable photocycle intermediate of the G-coupled protein receptor bovine
rhodopsin. Secondary undergraduate advisor: Daniel E. Koshland Jr. Thesis title: Proteomics and
Models for Enzyme Cooperativity
2008-2013 Postdoctoral Scholar, Quantitative Biology Institute, University of California, Berkeley. Primary
Postdoctoral advisors: Drs. Jamie Cate & Susan Marqusee. Project Title: Developing novel chemical
biology tools to study co-translational protein folding using single molecule FRET.
Postdoctoral Collaborator: Dr. Carlos J. Bustamante. Project Title: Developing methods to monitor
transient heat evolution during biochemical catalysis.
2007-2008 Visiting Research Associate, College of Medicine Health Science Center, Texas A&M University.
Secondary Graduate advisor: Dr. Arthur E. Johnson. Project Title: Developing novel unnatural
florescent suppressor amino-acyl-tRNAs for smFRET studies of co-translational folding in a wheatgerm
extract-based translation system.
2018 BIOCOM Life Science Catalyst Award Nominee
2018 CSU Faculty Innovation and Leadership Award
2017 大发 College of Science and Math Outstanding Faculty-Student Research Collaboration Award
2015 大发 Celebration of Faculty Scholarship and Creative Activities Award Recipient
2005 Biotechnology Research and Education Program (BREP) - Graduate Research and Education in Adaptive bio-Technology (GREAT) Fellowship Finalist
2004 NSF Graduate Student Fellowship Program, Honorable Mention
2003 Departmental Fellowship, UCLA Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry
2001 Graduated with Honors, UC Berkeley
2001 Departmental Honors, UC Berkeley Dept. of Molecular and Cell Biology
:
2018-2021 Education Committee Member, Biophysical Society
2018-2021 Publications Committee Member, Biophysical Society
2017-Present Member, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
2015-Present Member, American Chemical Society
2008-Present Member, Biophysical Society