Paula Brown is a Canadian science researcher, currently at British Columbia Institute of Technology. [1] [2] She is the Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Phytoanalytics.
Paula Brown | |
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Alma mater | University of British Columbia; Simon Fraser University; Dalhousie University |
Known for | Phytoanalytics |
Scientific career | |
Fields | mass spectrometry, high-performance liquid chromatography, analytical method development, chemometrics; natural product chemistry, validation studies, plant metabolomics |
In this position, Brown investigates the large range of chemical products made by plants, included how they are synthesized, regulated, and allocated within the tissues of plants, details of their extraction, as well as their role in plant and human health.
Brown is the Director of BCIT's Natural Health and Food Products Research Group (NRG) which works to actively support the Natural Health Products (NHP) industry for more than ten years. [3]
In 2018 Brown was appointed as a visiting Professor of Pharmacy Science of Hunan University of Chinese Medicine. [4]
Brown received a BSc Honours in Chemistry and Biochemistry from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1995. She continued on in 1998 to receive a MSc in Chemistry from Simon Fraser University and in 2011 completed her PhD in Chemistry from the University of British Columbia. [3] [5]
Paula Brown has earned many awards including the following. [3]
Michael Smith was a British-born Canadian biochemist and businessman. He shared the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Kary Mullis for his work in developing site-directed mutagenesis. Following a PhD in 1956 from the University of Manchester, he undertook postdoctoral research with Har Gobind Khorana at the British Columbia Research Council in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Subsequently, Smith worked at the Fisheries Research Board of Canada Laboratory in Vancouver before being appointed a professor of biochemistry in the UBC Faculty of Medicine in 1966. Smith's career included roles as the founding director of the UBC Biotechnology Laboratory and the founding scientific leader of the Protein Engineering Network of Centres of Excellence (PENCE). In 1996 he was named Peter Wall Distinguished Professor of Biotechnology. Subsequently, he became the founding director of the Genome Sequencing Centre at the BC Cancer Research Centre.
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