Jennifer M. Heemstra

Jennifer Heemstra


Charles Allen Thomas Professor of Chemistry

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Jen Heemstra is chair of the Department of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. Her lab is focused on harnessing the capabilities of proteins and nucleic acids to address unmet needs in biomedicine and the environment. Research in the Heemstra lab is highly interdisciplinary, drawing upon techniques from molecular and cellular biology, organic synthesis, analytical chemistry and materials science.

Heemstra is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, one of the most distinct honors in the scientific community. She has been the recipient of the Army Research Office Young Investigator Award, the National Science Foundation CAREER award, the Cottrell Scholar Award and the American Chemical Society Women Chemists Committee Rising Star Award.

She is also a passionate advocate for mentoring and diversity, equity and inclusion. Heemstra engages the broader academic community around these topics via her social media presence and professional development seminars and workshops.

In the media

Leading Through Uncertainty

As leaders, we can help others manage uncertainty, even if we can’t provide all the answers, writes Jen Heemstra, the Charles Allen Thomas Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences.

Stories

Chemists develop test to track crucial edits to RNA

Chemists develop test to track crucial edits to RNA

A team of WashU chemists led by graduate student Alex Quillin in Arts & Sciences has developed a test that makes it possible to precisely track edits in cells, an advance that could lead to a new understanding of the origins of many illnesses.
Heemstra installed as Charles Allen Thomas Professor in Chemistry

Heemstra installed as Charles Allen Thomas Professor in Chemistry

Jennifer Heemstra was installed as the Charles Allen Thomas Professor in Chemistry in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis during a ceremony April 10 at the Whittemore House. Her lab is focused on harnessing the capabilities of proteins and nucleic acids to address unmet needs in biomedicine and the environment.