Charlotte Hubbert

Kauffman Fellow

Charlotte is a Kauffman Fellow (Class 14) at Accelerator Corporation, joining the company in 2009. She has twelve years of life sciences experience, with proven performance in internationally recognized publications including Nature and Science.
 
Prior to joining Accelerator, Charlotte was a Ruth L. Kirschstein NIH post-doctoral fellow studying stem cell and regenerative medicine at the University Washington. Her work focused on the immune response as an evolutionarily-differentiated system key to harnessing the regenerative power of inducible progenitor stem cells.
 
Previously, Charlotte was a pre-doctoral fellow with the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Fund at Duke University. While pursuing her Ph.D. at Duke, Charlotte initiated a paradigm shift in the field of protein acetylation, and was awarded the Harold M. Weintraub International Graduate Student Award for outstanding achievement from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
 
Charlotte completed her post-doctoral training with Dr. Randall T. Moon at the University of Washington Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine and holds a Ph.D in Cancer Biology from Duke University. She received her B.S. degree in Microbiology from the University of Washington.