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Scott Allen Tenenbaum
Assistant Professor
School of Public Health and Gen*NY*Sis
Center for Excellence in Cancer Genomics
Areas of expertise:
Genomics; gene-expression; cancer; stem cells; virology; genetics; microarrays; biotechnology; immunology; ribonomics
Genomics; gene-expression; cancer; stem cells; virology; genetics; microarrays; biotechnology; immunology; ribonomics
Campus e-mail:
Campus phone:
(518) 591-7157
Biography:
Scott Allen Tenenbaum is an associate professor in biomedical sciences at UAlbany's School of Public Health and the Gen*NY*Sis Center for Excellence in Cancer Genomics. He did his undergraduate training at the universities of Michigan and Missouri and received his doctorate in microbiology and immunology from Tulane University Medical Center (1994) studying viral-host interactions and autoimmunity. Tenenbaum remained at Tulane for several more years studying HIV resistance in hemophiliacs after receiving a National Hemophilia Foundation Judith Graham Pool Postdoctoral Fellowship. Tenenbaum continued his studies at Duke University Medical Center under the tutelage of Jack D. Keene, James B. Duke professor of microbiology and molecular genetics, where he helped pioneer the field of "Ribonomics", which is the genomic-scale study of post-transcriptional gene regulation.
Scott Allen Tenenbaum is an associate professor in biomedical sciences at UAlbany's School of Public Health and the Gen*NY*Sis Center for Excellence in Cancer Genomics. He did his undergraduate training at the universities of Michigan and Missouri and received his doctorate in microbiology and immunology from Tulane University Medical Center (1994) studying viral-host interactions and autoimmunity. Tenenbaum remained at Tulane for several more years studying HIV resistance in hemophiliacs after receiving a National Hemophilia Foundation Judith Graham Pool Postdoctoral Fellowship. Tenenbaum continued his studies at Duke University Medical Center under the tutelage of Jack D. Keene, James B. Duke professor of microbiology and molecular genetics, where he helped pioneer the field of "Ribonomics", which is the genomic-scale study of post-transcriptional gene regulation.

