Nancy Kedersha

Nancy Kedersha
Born1951 (age 7374)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBucknell University (Bachelors) Rutgers University (PhD)
AwardsLennart Nilsson Award Nikon Small World finalist
Scientific career
FieldsMicroscopy
InstitutionsUCLA ImmunoGen Inc.
Thesis (1983)
Doctoral advisorRichard A Berg
Other academic advisorsLeonard Rome

Nancy Kedersha (born 1951) is an American cell biologist and micrographer. She got her Ph.D. from Rutgers University where she worked in Richard Berg's lab studying the characteristics and assembly of prolyl hydroxylases. Afterwards she joined Leonard Rome's lab at UCLA as a post-doctoral fellow where she co-discovered the vault (organelle). Subsequently, she worked at ImmunoGen Inc. where she worked on staining and photographing different cancer cells. She then worked as an instructor of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Paul Anderson's lab, where her work focused on studying stress granule formation. In late-2020, she retired. In addition to her contributions as a scientist, Kedersha has been quite successful in different microscopy competitions. She is a four-time Nikon Small World finalist and in 2011 she won the Lennart Nilsson Award.