CHRISTOPHER E LEE
Broker in Cambridge, MA

License number
Massachusetts 127368
Issued Date
Oct 17, 1991
Expiration Date
Jul 25, 1994
Type
Salesperson
Address
Address
Cambridge, MA 02138

Professional information

Christopher Lee Photo 1

Hardware And Software Engineer At Sookbox Llc

Position:
Software and Hardware at Sookbox LLC
Location:
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Industry:
Mechanical or Industrial Engineering
Work:
Sookbox LLC - Cambridge since Nov 2012 - Software and Hardware TDavlin Glass - Cambridge, MA Jun 2012 - Oct 2012 - Contract Engineer Rutgers University - Rutgers University Sep 2011 - Apr 2012 - Senior Design Project Rutgers University May 2010 - Sep 2010 - Molecular Beam Epitaxy & Quantum Device Lab
Education:
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey-New Brunswick 2007 - 2012
BS 2012, Mechanical Engineering
Skills:
Matlab, SolidWorks, C++, Java, Python, Javascript, HTML, CSS, PHP, MySQL
Interests:
Rugby, Technology, Audiophile Tech, DIY


Christopher Lee Photo 2

Senior Staff Scientist At Ariad Pharmaceuticals

Location:
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Industry:
Pharmaceuticals
Work:
AMRI - Syracuse Research Center Nov 2006 - Dec 2012 - Senior Research Scientist I
Education:
Cornell University 2004 - 2006
Post Doctoral Fellow, Organic Chemistry
University of Pittsburgh 1999 - 2004
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Organic Chemistry
Saint Michael's College 1994 - 1998
Bachelor of Applied Science (B.A.Sc.), Chemistry
Skills:
Medicinal Chemistry, Chemistry


Christopher Lee Photo 3

Protein Detection By Negative Staining

US Patent:
4782027, Nov 1, 1988
Filed:
Jan 22, 1987
Appl. No.:
7/007136
Inventors:
Christopher Lee - Cambridge MA
Andrew Levin - Cambridge MA
Assignee:
President and Fellows of Harvard College - Cambridge MA
International Classification:
G01N 3300
US Classification:
436 86
Abstract:
A polypeptide is located in a gel matrix by treating the matrix with a negative staining agent (i. e. an agent that stains the gel more intensely in regions devoid of polypeptides, so that gel areas exhibiting reduced staining intensity are indicative of the presence of polypeptide). Specifically, the staining agent comprises a copper or cobalt salt, and a detergent. The term polypeptide is used to include polypeptides of all sizes, including proteins and glycoproteins. The polypeptide can be purified by applying it to a gel matrix, causing it to run into the matrix, applying the above-described staining agent and then eluting the polypeptides from the matrix.