John Dueber is a scientific advisory board member at Novome Biotechnologies. John has also worked as a graduate student researcher at UC Berkeley and as an undergraduate researcher at the University of Maryland. As a graduate student, they developed a glycosylation/biological protecting group-based strategy to dye denim without hazardous reducing agents. John also created the first in vivo polymer exclusion assay for peroxisomal permeability and discovered a new tyrosine hydroxylase activity in a P450. The technologies they developed resulted in two patent applications. As an undergraduate researcher, they worked in Joonil Seog's lab (biomaterials) and William Bentley's lab (metabolic engineering). John constructed new nanoscale structures and extended a signaling pathway to detect S-adenosyl methionine. John also had several summer undergraduate research experiences at Rice University, UC Berkeley, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
John Dueber completed their Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Bioengineering from the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to that, they completed their Bachelor's Degrees in both Bioengineering and Mathematics from the University of Maryland. John also holds a certification from CompTIA in CompTIA A+ Certification.