Melissa Moore to speak at 91影库2025
RNA biologist, industry executive and science communicator Melissa Moore will take center stage as a featured speaker at the 91影库 and Molecular Biology’s 2025 Annual Meeting, sharing her groundbreaking insights into RNA biology and therapeutics. A pioneering scientist and former Chief Scientific Officer at Moderna, Moore has played a key role in advancing messenger RNA, or mRNA, –based medicine and shaping the future of biotechnology.
At 91影库2025, she will discuss how persistence and serendipity helped define her career and why understanding poker fundamentals can up your scientific game.

After obtaining her Ph.D. in biological chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she pursued postdoctoral research with , a Nobel laureate who discovered . During her postdoctoral research, Moore developed innovative techniques for site-specific modification of pre-mRNA, a technology that bridges long molecules of RNA.
As an early career scientist, Moore conducted research at Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, where her group explored the inner workings of RNA assembly, function and degradation. She revealed the activity and structural assembly of the spliceosome, which acts like a pair of molecular scissors to cut out unnecessary regions within newly transcribed genes to produce mature messenger RNA. Her work provided important insights into cellular quality control pathways.
After 13 years with Brandeis University, Moore joined the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School. Here, she focused on developing RNA-based therapeutics for preeclampsia, a life-threatening blood pressure disorder that affects of pregnant individuals, including . She designed a small interfering RNA molecule targeting the soluble Flt1 proteins, which can cause abnormal placental blood vessel development. One of these drugs, , is currently in clinical trials and received a Fast Track designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

In 2016, Moore became the Chief Scientific Officer of Platform Research at , where she and her team helped develop Moderna’s mRNA-based vaccine against . In addition, she helped petition the FDA for an emergency use authorization during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic
In 2021, Moore shifted her focus to scientific communication, with the goal of explaining science to academics and lay people alike. Moore’s TED talk, “,” ranked among the top 10 most-watched in 2022.
Moore is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, winner of the 2011 91影库William C. Rose Award and winner of the 2021 RNA Society Lifetime Achievement Award. She has co-founded multiple biotech companies, including Via Scientific and Kerna Labs, sits on the boards of nChroma Bio and Tessera Therapeutics and serves in multiple consulting roles.
Enjoy reading 91影库Today?
Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.
Learn moreFeatured jobs
from the
Get the latest from 91影库Today
Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.
Latest in Careers
Careers highlights or most popular articles

Upcoming opportunities
Submit your abstract for ASBMB's upcoming meetings on nucleophilic proteases, gene expression and O-GlcNAc.

Upcoming opportunities
Friendly reminder: Submit your abstracts for upcoming 91影库meetings! Just added: virtual events on AI and STEMM graduate education.

Upcoming opportunities
Coming soon: 91影库Breakthroughs webinar on biosynthesis and regulation of plant phenolic compounds and a Lipid Research Division seminar on membrane lipids.

Upcoming opportunities
Just added: New fellowship and research award opportunities. Friendly reminder: Submit your abstract for ASBMB's upcoming meetings.

Upcoming opportunities
Friendly reminder: May 12 is the early registration and oral abstract deadline for ASBMB's meeting on O-GlcNAcylation in health and disease.

Sketching, scribbling and scicomm
Graduate student Ari Paiz describes how her love of science and art blend to make her an effective science communicator.