People
Principal Investigator
James P. Landers, PhD, FRSCjpl5e@virginia.edu
Professor of Chemistry Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Associate Professor of Pathology
Director, Center for Nano-Biosystems Integration Member, UVA Cancer Center
Jefferson Scholar Faculty Fellow
Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry
1991: Canadian Medical Research Fellow, Mayo Clinic
1988: Ph.D. Biochemistry, University of Guelph, Canada
1983: B.S. Biochemistry, University of Guelph, Canada
Dr. James Landers is currently Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Virginia, as well as Associate Professor of Pathology at the University of Virginia Health System. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry with a minor in Biomedicine and his Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of Guelph in Ontario (Canada) in 1984 and 1988, respectively. After a year as a post-doctoral fellow at the Banting Institute at the University of Toronto School of Medicine, as a Canadian Medical Research Council (MRC) Fellow at the Mayo Clinic-Rochester, he studied cancer biology and diagnostics under Thomas Spelsberg, a renowned breast cancer biochemist. He launched and directed Mayo Clinic’s Clinical Capillary Electrophoresis Facility in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, developing clinical assays based on capillary electrophoretic technology.
Dr. Landers joined the Chemistry Department at the University of Pittsburgh in 1997, where he forayed into analytical microfluidic systems with the goal of developing the next generation molecular diagnostics platform. This research was bolstered by the move in 1999 to the University of Virginia where access to a dedicated class-100 cleanroom for microchip fabrication allowed for rapid prototyping of microdevices for separations, DNA purification, and DNA amplification. His group was among the first to generate a fully integrated lab-on-a-chip (PNAS 103:19272, 2006), successfully applied to detecting infectious agents in biofluids and cancer diagnostics, and more recently defined new approaches to fluidic control on microchips (NATURE Physics 5:231, 2009). He has authored more than 180 papers and 25 book chapters on topics as diverse as receptor biochemistry, capillary electrophoretic method development, microchip fabrication, forensic DNA analysis and integrated microfluidic systems for application to both the clinical and forensic arenas. In addition, he has recently completed the third in the succession of editions of CRC Press Handbook of Capillary Electrophoresis, with this one extrapolated to microchip electrophoresis and associated microtechniques.
Administrative Assistant
Patricia White
phw7t@virginia.edu
PhD Candidates
Sadie Kiendzior
smk8ud@virginia.edu
B.S. Biology, University of Saint Joseph, 2018
Forensic analysis of nucleic acids, detection of microbial pathogens for forensic analysis, development and genetics.
- First place for oral presentation at the Beta Beta Beta regional conference, 2018
- Sr. Mary Consuela Mulcahy Founders’ Award in Biology, 2018
- American Chemical Society award in Physical Chemistry, 2017
- American Chemical Society award in Organic Chemistry, 2016
- CRC Press First Year Achievement award in General Chemistry, 2015
Lambert, K. M., Z. D. Stempel, S. M. Kiendzior, A. L. Bartelson and W. F. Bailey (2017). "Enhancement of the Oxidizing Power of an Oxoammonium Salt by Electronic Modification of a Distal Group." The Journal of Organic Chemistry 82(21): 11440-11446.
Renna Nouwairi
rln3bm@virginia.edu
B.S. Chemistry (ACS Certified), Mathematics Minor, James Madison University, 2017
- Jefferson Scholars Foundation Dissertation Year Fellow
- Institutional Review Board Contact
- Career Seminar Series Committee Member
- Student Member of the American Chemical Society (ACS)
Rachelle Turiello
rat3a@virginia.edu
B.A. Interdisciplinary Studies: Bio-Cultural Hominid Anthropology, University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) M.S. Forensic Science, Towson University
- Forensic Sciences Foundation Jan S. Bashinski Criminalistics Graduate Thesis Grant (2021)
- Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice Graduate Research Fellowship (2020 - 2023)
- Forensic Chemist, Prince George's County Police Department, 2018-2019 Qualified as an expert witness in Crime Scene Processing and Evidence Collection, Baltimore City Circuit Court, 2018
- Graduate Adjunct Instructor, Forensic Science, Towson University, 2017-2019
- Crime Laboratory Technician, Baltimore Police Department 2016-2018
- Graduate Research Assistant, Towson University 2015-2016
- American Academy of Forensic Science 68th-74th Annual Scientific Meetings, 2016-2022
- Bode Cellmark Forensics 4th Mid-Atlantic DNA & Investigators Conference, 2015
- Forensic Anthropology Intern, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Peru, 2012
Larissa Cunha
llc9t@virginia.edu
B.S. Chemistry, University of South Carolina, 2019
B.S. Pharmaceutical Sciences, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, 2013
Drug Detection, Microchip Fabrication for Forensic Applications, Microfluidic Separations, Forensic Chemistry, Detection of Chemical/Biological Weapons.
- Pharmacist in the Walmart Brazil Drugstore Division, 2013-2014.
- Intern at Criminalistics Institute of Pernambuco (BR), working with detection of illicit drugs and body fluids, 2012.
Junyi Yao
rcb9sz@virginia.edu
Bioanalytical chemistry, Organ-on-a-chip, Drug screening, Microfluidic chips fabrication
- Financial support for research and professional development, College and Graduates School of Arts and Sciences, University of Virginia, 2021
- The 23rd International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences (MicroTAS), Switzerland, 2019
- The 6th International Conference on Bio-Sensing Technology, Malaysia, 2019
- The 9th International Multidisciplinary Conference on Optofluidics (IMCO), Hong Kong, 2019
- The 22nd International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences (MicroTAS), Taiwan, 2018
- The 10th International Symposium on Microchemistry and Microsystems (ISMM), Korea, 2018
- The 8th International Multidisciplinary Conference on Optofluidics (IMCO), China, 2018 (Best Oral Presentation Award)
- Researcher/ Teaching Assistant, Southern University of Science and Technology, 2015-2021
- Undergraduate student Research and Presentation Grant, Yantai University, 2015
Engineers
Emmanuel Kenscoff
ejk7ez@virginia.edu
Liam Tolbert
lct4am@virginia.edu
PhD Students
Enwere, Miracle Nmesomachi
ftp5kg@virginia.edu
B.Sc. Biochemistry, Abia State University Uturu, 2015
M.Sc. Biochemistry, University of Lagos, 2020
M.Sc. Bioinformatics, Covenant University, 2022
- Best graduating Masters (M.Sc.) student, Department of Biochemistry, University of Lagos, Nigeria, 2020
- High Impact Scholarship awarded by the World Bank-funded Covenant Applied Informatics and Communications-Africa Center of Excellence (CApIC-ACE) 2021
- Graduate Research Assistant, Covenant University, Nigeria, 2021-2022
Carter Jones
ckj2sc@virginia.edu
Research Assistant at Somalogic, working with aptamer-based proteomics, 2021-2022
Taylor Grace Chambers
mmv4ch@virginia.edu
- NIST research scholarship 2020-2022
- Research Assistantship, Auburn University, 2021
- Applied Polymer Technology Extension Consortium 2020
- Troy University Science Research Conference 2021
- Auburn Research Symposium, 2021
- Southeastern Regional Meeting ACS 2022
Undergraduate Students
Allison Burton
Major: Chemistry
Minor: Art History
Mentor: Renna
Emmanuel Kenscoff
Major: Mechanical Engineering
Minor: Systems Engineering
Mentor: Sadie
Megan Joshi
Major: Biochemistry
Mentor: Sadie
Jim Dapaah
Major: Chemistry
Mentor: Sadie
Liam Tolbert
Major: Computer science
Minor: Data Science
Mentor: Sadie
Emily Kyaw
Major: Kinesiology major
Minor: Chemistry
Mentor: Larissa
Garrett Ross
Major: Biology; Minor: Bioethics
Mentor: Rachelle
Nel Straub
Majors: Computer Science (BA) and Chemistry (BA)
Mentor: Rachelle
Jayna
Majors: B.S. in Chemistry and is currently in the (BS) and Commerce -
Biotechnology (MS)
Mentor: Carter
Minahal Aisha
Major: Chemistry
Minor: BA Computer Science
Mentor: Junyi
Zoey Golabek
Major: Chemistry Minor: Computer Science
Mentor: Renna
Catherine Engel
Major: Biomedical Engineering
Mentor: Carter
Hannah Aiken
Major: Biochemistry
Mentor: Tayler
Sophia Hartshorn
Major: Biochemistry
Mentor: Junyi
Harrison Mcelroy
Major: Biochemistry
Mentor: Miracle
Delaney Smith
Major: BS Biochemistry
Mentor: Miracle
Samuel Addison McCollam
Major: Biology
Mentor: Tayler
Alumni