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Linial
Maxine Linial, PhD

Maxine Linial, PhD

  • Professor Emeritus, Basic Sciences Division, Fred Hutch

Background

Dr. Maxine Linial is a leader in the study of foamy viruses, a type of virus that infects cats, cows, horses and primates, including monkeys and, more recently, humans. She has led several projects designed to learn more about how foamy viruses replicate, change their genetic structure and jump from monkeys to humans. Foamy viruses are not known to cause disease. But they are important to study partly because of the story of HIV, which originated from a family of viruses that don’t cause disease in their natural hosts. Dr. Linial hopes to lay a foundation of knowledge for foamy viruses before they cause problems in people — rather than trying to play catchup as scientists needed to do when HIV arrived unexpectedly.

Education

PhD, Molecular Biology, Tufts University

BS, Bacteriology, Cornell University

"My science has always been driven by a passion for discoveries that could bring an enormous benefit to people. That still drives me today."

— Dr. Maxine Linial

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Stories

All news
Dr. Paul Neiman, founding member of Fred Hutch, dies at 78 Physician-scientist led the charge in prioritizing fundamental research, built bridges between lab and clinic October 12, 2017
Doctor, researcher, patient and pathfinder Dr. Paul Neiman reflects on 40 years of leadership, collaboration and curiosity September 28, 2015
Science looks before viruses leap What a semi-nomadic ethnic group — and their performing monkeys — can teach us about how viruses jump from animals to humans June 15, 2015