Alanna Schepartz
Encyclopedia
Alanna Schepartz is an American-born professor and scientist. She is currently the Milton Harris '29 Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry at Yale University. She holds a joint appointment in the Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and is Chair of the Chemical Biology Institute Advisory Committee.
supervision of Ronald Breslow. Following postdoctoral work with Peter
Dervan at the California Institute of Technology, she joined the faculty at Yale University in
July of 1988.
and control biological recognition and function. Her research has contributed to three different
areas of chemical biology: protein-DNA recognition and transcriptional activation; the
development of miniature proteins that bind specifically and with high affinity to protein and
DNA; and the development of β-peptides as protein ligands and as building blocks of protein-like
architectures. The development of β-peptide bundles was cited by Chemical and Engineering News, a weekly news magazine of the chemical world, as one of 2007's “most important research advances”.
Early life and education
Alanna Schepartz was born on January 9, 1962 in New York City and was raised in Rego Park, Queens. She graduated from Forest Hills High School in 1978. After receiving a B.S degree in Chemistry from the State University of New York-Albany in 1982, Alanna carried out graduate work at Columbia University under thesupervision of Ronald Breslow. Following postdoctoral work with Peter
Dervan at the California Institute of Technology, she joined the faculty at Yale University in
July of 1988.
Yale career
Alanna Schepartz joined the faculty at Yale University in July of 1988. She was promoted to Associate Professor in 1992, to Full Professor with tenure in 1995, and was named the Milton Harris, '29 Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry in 2000. In 2001, she was named a Professor in the Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental biology. From 2002-2007, she held a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professorship. Alanna Schepartz is the first woman to be granted tenure in Yale's Department of Chemistry, and the first female full Professor in any physical sciences department at Yale.Field of study
The Schepartz laboratory is known for the creative application of chemical principles to understandand control biological recognition and function. Her research has contributed to three different
areas of chemical biology: protein-DNA recognition and transcriptional activation; the
development of miniature proteins that bind specifically and with high affinity to protein and
DNA; and the development of β-peptides as protein ligands and as building blocks of protein-like
architectures. The development of β-peptide bundles was cited by Chemical and Engineering News, a weekly news magazine of the chemical world, as one of 2007's “most important research advances”.