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Biggins
Sue Biggins, PhD

Sue Biggins, PhD

  • Director, Basic Sciences Division, Fred Hutch
  • Member, Translational Data Science Integrated Research Center (TDS IRC), Fred Hutch
206.667.1351
206.667.6526

Background

Dr. Sue Biggins directs the Basic Sciences Division and conducts research on how cells sort chromosomes, the molecules that carry DNA. Every time a cell divides, it must copy each chromosome and make sure that both daughter cells inherit exactly one copy of each. The wrong number of chromosomes is the most common chromosomal abnormality in cancers and the cause of birth defects and other diseases.

Dr. Biggins' work focuses on understanding how cells regulate division and chromosome movement during cell division to ensure accurate self-renewal, proliferation and development. Her lab takes an interdisciplinary approach that combines biochemical, biophysical, cell biological, genetic and structural approaches using yeast and human cells as model systems. Dr. Biggins led the team that originally isolated the kinetochore, the large molecular machine that coordinates chromosome sorting, from yeast cells. This accomplishment paved the way for critical new findings, including the role that tension plays in chromosome sorting.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Education

PhD, Princeton University

BS, Stanford University

"There is still so much fundamental biology that must be uncovered if we want to cure disease — our goal is to make these discoveries."

— Dr. Sue Biggins

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Stories

All news
Cell biologist and former Fred Hutch division leader Dr. Jonathan Cooper retires Cooper sustained the distinct culture of Basic Sciences for four decades March 26, 2025
Evolutionary cell biologist Dr. Grant King named a Hanna Gray Fellow Long fascinated by life seen and unseen, King awarded eight years of funding to finish postdoctoral training at Fred Hutch and establish an independent lab January 29, 2025
Priming the pump for future funding Fred Hutch postdoctoral researchers win NIH training fellowship for pancreatic cancer and kinetochore projects September 4, 2024