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Keystone Symposia Fellow Spotlight: Dr. Thu (Autumn) Doan
By Jasmin Twiggs
We are proud to feature Keystone Symposia Fellow Thu (Autumn) Doan, PhD, a Postdoctoral Fellow in...
Dr. Oleta Johnson earned her Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry from Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU) in 2013. In 2014, she joined the lab of Professor Amanda Garner at University of Michigan and developed chemical tools to study the conformational plasticity of an intrinsically disorder protein (IDP), 4E-BP1, and earned her PhD in Chemical Biology from University of Michigan in 2018. Dr. Johnson continued utilizing chemical tools to understand the relationship between protein dynamics and function as postdoctoral researcher with Professor Jason Gestwicki at University of California, San Francisco. In the Gestwicki Lab, she used chemical probes to study the mechanisms employed by molecular chaperone proteins to maintain protein homeostasis. Dr. Johnson’s research program at MIT is rooted in her unique expertise, using chemical and biophysical tools to dissect the relationship between protein dynamics and function. Specifically, the Johnson Lab uses chemistry and biophysics to understand and tune molecular chaperone protein DnaJB6 and its ability to suppress the toxic accumulation of proteins associated with neurodegenerative diseases like Huntington’s Disease and Parkinson’s disease.
Research Area(s):
BiochemistryResearch Keywords:
Mentor: Elizabeth Villa, PhD
Jun 4, 2026 by Jasmin Twiggs
By Jasmin Twiggs
We are proud to feature Keystone Symposia Fellow Thu (Autumn) Doan, PhD, a Postdoctoral Fellow in...
May 28, 2026 by Emma Wabel
By Emma Wabel
We are proud to feature Keystone Symposia Fellow, Camila Coelho, PhD, MBA, an Assistant Professor at...