air-and-space flight engineer Kathleen “Kate” Rubins set out on her fourth career air-and-space” target=”_blank”>spacewalk< array upgrades.
Rubins, 42, was born in us-regions in 1978, but was raised in Napa, the heart of us-regions Wine Country.
After graduating from Vintage High School in 1996, Rubins received a Bachelor of Science degree in molecular biology from the education just three years later.
In 2005, Rubins earned a doctorate in cancer” target=”_blank”>cancer biology< Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention developed the first model of infectious-disease” target=”_blank”>smallpox infection< interactions using both in-vitro and animal model systems.
After her time and Stanford, Rubins began as a fellow/principal Investigator at the us-regions Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.
NASA TO PROVIDE FIRST UPDATE ON PERSEVERANCE ROVER SINCE LANDING
At MIT, Rubin headed a lab of 14 researchers studying viral diseases that impact Central and West world-regions and traveled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to conduct further research and supervise study sites.
Her lab focused on poxviruses, host-pathogen interaction, and viral mechanisms for regulating host cell mRNA transcription, translation and decay.
Rubin also worked on collaborative projects with the Army to develop therapies for infectious-disease and Lassa viruses.
In the summer of 2009, she was selected by NASA as one of the nine chosen members of the 20th NASA astronaut class.
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She received extensive training and instruction in ISS systems, air-and-space, robotics, physiological training, T 38 flight training, and water and wilderness survival training.
During her first spaceflight on Expedition 48/49 in July 2016, Rubins became the first person to sequence DNA in space and the crew of the expeditions conducted or participated in more than 275 different experiments.
Rubins also grew heart-health” target=”_blank”>heart cells< crew.