Jerelle A. Joseph is a
computational chemist and academic from
Dominica, who is also an advocate for representation and diversity in science. She is the founder of CariScholar, a network connecting students and academics from Caribbean countries.
Biography
Joseph grew up in the village of
Vieille Case in Dominica.[1] Her mother was a nurse and her father worked a variety of jobs.[2] She graduated in 2012 with a BSc in Chemistry and mathematics from the
University of the West Indies. This was followed by an MPhil in Chemistry at the same institution, graduating in 2014. She subsequently graduated with a DPhil in Chemistry from the
University of Cambridge in 2018.[3] She subsequently continued her work at Cambridge in a post-doctoral role in the team of
Rosana Collepardo-Guevara.[4][1] In January 2023 she was appointed Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering at
Princeton University.[3][5][6] She works on the development of computational approaches to determine cellular organisation, in particular
liquid–liquid phase separation.[7][8]
Joseph is the founder of CariScholar, an organisation designed to connect students and academics from the Caribbean for mentoring.[1][9][10] Mentors include pscyhopharmocologist Kito Barrow,[11] physician Mondel George,[12] engineer Asher Williams,[13] machine learning scientist Randall Martyr, amongst others.[14]
Awards
Outstanding Youth in Diaspora Award – National Youth Council Dominica (2022)[15]
Rising Star in Soft and Biological Matter – University of Chicago (2020)[16]
Bill Gates Sr Award – Gates Cambridge Trust (2018)[4]
R. L. Seale Chemistry Prize – University of the West Indies (2012)[3]
Faculty of Arts and Science Scholarship – Government of Dominica (2009)[3]
Publications
Joseph, J. A., Espinosa, J. R., Sanchez-Burgos, I., Garaizar, A., Frenkel, D., & Collepardo-Guevara, R. (2021). Thermodynamics and kinetics of phase separation of protein-RNA mixtures by a minimal model. Biophysical Journal, 120(7), 1219-1230.
Joseph, J. A., Reinhardt, A., Aguirre, A., Chew, P. Y., Russell, K. O., Espinosa, J. R., ... & Collepardo-Guevara, R. (2021). Physics-driven coarse-grained model for biomolecular phase separation with near-quantitative accuracy. Nature Computational Science, 1(11), 732-743.
Krainer, G., Welsh, T. J., Joseph, J. A., Espinosa, J. R., Wittmann, S., de Csilléry, E., ... & Knowles, T. P. (2021). Reentrant liquid condensate phase of proteins is stabilized by hydrophobic and non-ionic interactions. Nature communications, 12(1), 1-14.
Espinosa, J. R., Joseph, J. A., Sanchez-Burgos, I., Garaizar, A., Frenkel, D., & Collepardo-Guevara, R. (2020). Liquid network connectivity regulates the stability and composition of biomolecular condensates with many components. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117(24), 13238-13247.
Sanchez-Burgos, I., Espinosa, J. R., Joseph, J. A., & Collepardo-Guevara, R. (2021). Valency and binding affinity variations can regulate the multilayered organization of protein condensates with many components. Biomolecules, 11(2), 278.