
A place for growth and collaboration
I am a senior research assistant at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. I grew up in Houston, and I am the first in my family to attend college; I earned a bachelor of science in biochemistry at the University of Texas at San Antonio, the city’s largest university with more than 34,000 students.

I am a biochemist for the physiology department, and we study ion channels using biophysical approaches such as isothermal titration calorimetry to help determine binding affinity and biomolecular interactions of any two molecules in a label-free environment by measuring thermodynamic parameters including affinity, stoichiometry, enthalpy and entropy. Working in the lab is exciting and suspenseful — every day I do different tasks and experiments, and their results are often unpredictable. For instance, we believed that phosphorylation would disrupt the high affinity of the protein complex and block the binding site to prevent it from interacting with other molecules; much to our surprise we detected binding of the protein complex in a calcium-free environment. This was unexpected and very exciting.
With its interconnected universities, San Antonio has great opportunities for growth. There are lots of collaborations through health care and among universities. At UT Health, which is in the heart of San Antonio’s medical center, students can shadow and work with certified professionals in hospitals, and doctors paired with researchers help treat patients at Mays Cancer Center with cutting-edge technology and research. So far, I have collaborated with students from the University of Texas and the University of the Incarnate Word. San Antonio also offers academic and industry opportunities.
Besides career options, San Antonio has beautiful and relaxing scenery composed of hills, nice skies and trees. There is so much to do in the city, such as Six Flags Fiesta Texas, shopping at the Shops at La Cantera (an open-air mall), dining in at various restaurants and unique and fun night spots including Top Golf and JazzTX.
Submit an abstract
, the annual meeting of the ɬÀï·¬, will be held March 23–26 in San Antonio. Abstracts for poster presentations and spotlight talks will be accepted through Nov. 30.
Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?
Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.
Learn moreGet the latest from ASBMB Today
Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.
Latest in People
People highlights or most popular articles

ASBMB names 2026 award winners
Check out their lectures at the annual meeting in March in the Washington, D.C., metro area.

Peer through a window to the future of science
Aaron Hoskins of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Sandra Gabelli of Merck, co-chairs of the 2026 ASBMB annual meeting, to be held March 7–10, explain how this gathering will inspire new ideas and drive progress in molecular life sciences.

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants
They will receive at least $1 million of funding to study the biological mechanisms that underly birds' longevity and sequence–function relationships of intrinsically disordered proteins.

How undergrad research catalyzes scientific careers
Undergraduate research doesn’t just teach lab skills, it transforms scientists. For Antonio Rivera and Julissa Cruz–Bautista, joining a lab became a turning point, fostering critical thinking, persistence and research identity.

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award
They were honored for contributing their time, knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to mentoring postdocs in their labs.

ASBMB names 2025 Marion B. Sewer scholarship recipients
Ten undergraduates interested in biochemistry and molecular biology will each receive $2,000 toward their tuition and related educational costs.