Lumen Bioscience
Hannah Tabakh has a diverse work experience, starting in 2008 as a Research Assistant at the University of California, San Francisco. Hannah conducted research in bioengineering applications and created libraries of parts in E. coli. Hannah also worked as a Research Assistant at UC Berkeley in the Chemical Engineering Department's Tullman-Ercek Lab. At the Berkeley Student Cooperative, they held two roles, including Conduct Committee Chair and Administrative Assistant. Hannah then worked as a Part-time Teacher at C2 Education before joining the University of Washington as a Graduate Research Associate. In this role, they performed graduate-level research on host-bacterial interplay using Listeria monocytogenes as a model pathogen. In 2020, they joined Lumen Bioscience as a Scientist II.
Hannah Tabakh completed their education in a chronological manner. Hannah first attended Lowell High School, but the duration of their studies there is unknown. After completing high school, they went on to pursue a Bachelor of Science degree in Microbial Biology at the University of California, Berkeley from 2009 to 2013. Hannah then continued their education by obtaining a PhD in Microbiology from the University of Washington, which they completed between 2014 and 2020.
Lumen Bioscience
Lumen unlocks the full potential of biologic drugs, whose promise has been held back by the lack of scalable technology. Lumen's goal is to transform the way such drugs are developed, what they cost, and who has access to them.