Professor David A. Spiegel
David A.
Spiegel, Ph.D., M.D. is
Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacology at
Yale University and
Research Advisory Board Member at SENS Foundation.
David was born in New York City, and grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey.
From a
very young age, he was fascinated by the chemistry and biology of small
molecules, and at 16 began doing research in a neuroanesthesiology
laboratory at the University of Iowa. He went on to attend Harvard
University where he conducted research under the guidance of Professor
Yoshito Kishi. After graduating from Harvard, David began in Yale
University’s M.D./Ph.D. program. There he conducted graduate research in
Professor John Wood’s laboratory focusing on developing synthetic
approaches toward the phomoidrides. During the course of these studies,
he discovered that trialkylborane-water complexes could function as
H-atom donors in free radical reactions.
Following graduation from Yale, David moved back to Harvard for postdoctoral
studies under
the guidance of Professor Stuart L. Schreiber. There he focused on
developing an oligomer-based method for small-molecule synthesis to
enable the rapid assembly of skeletally diverse small molecules starting
from simple monomers.
He began as an Assistant Professor at Yale in June of 2007. Since
that time he has been fortunate to be named recipient of the NIH New
Innovator Award, the Ellison Medical Foundation New Scholar Award, the
Camille and Henry Dreyfus New Faculty Award, and an Alfred P. Sloan
Fellowship.
David earned his B.A. (Magna Cum Laude) in Chemistry at
Harvard University in 1995. He earned his M.S. in Pharmacology in 2000,
his M.D. in May 2004, and his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry in
December 2004, all
at
Yale University.
Read
Yale takes work on synthetic HIV-fighting and prostate
cancer-fighting
molecules to next level,
Bacterial cell walls unlocked, and
Scientists trick bacteria with small molecules.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.