For the past 100 years, the Guggenheim Foundation has bestowed one of the highest intellectual honors on North American academics and creatives: the Guggenheim Fellowship. Zora Neale Hurston penned Their Eyes Were Watching God during her time as a fellow; James Baldwin and UC Berkeley’s Jennifer Doudna are also alumni. This year, two additional Berkeley professors, philosopher Hannah Ginsborg and chemical engineer Markita del Carpio Landry, will join the ranks.
The fellowship, which named 198 new awardees last week, allows recipients to pursue ambitious projects under “the freest possible conditions” according to the Guggenheim Foundation. Del Carpio Landry, a Berkeley associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, as well as of neuroscience, said this freedom is crucial: “It allows me to pursue bold and unconventional ideas that are failure-prone but could generate significant impact if successful.”
Del Carpio Landry’s lab focuses on manipulating particles that are less than one-millionth of a centimeter large. Her team publishes a slew of papers each year, but in general, its work centers around two scientific problems. The first is helping scientists track neurochemical signaling in the brain — in other words, the way that neurons communicate. Monitoring these chemical messengers could help scientists better understand psychiatric and neurodegenerative conditions, such as Huntington’s, Parkinson’s and depression. Del Carpio Landry has also investigated how to deliver outside components, including tools for genetic modifications, to plant cells. In 2023, this research won her the Bakar Prize for its potential to help create climate-resilient crops.