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What's Up, Doc?

What's Up, Doc?

By: Maurinne Bonnet and Anne-Sophie Bohrer
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Welcome to "What's Up, Doc?" ! This informational interview series is designed to support the professional development needs and career exploration efforts of U-M Postdoctoral Fellows. Each episode features a former U-M Postdoctoral Fellow who will discuss their experience transitioning into their career of choice and share advice to help you navigate your own postdoctoral journey. Created by a U-M Postdoctoral Fellow, for Postdoctoral Fellows, in collaboration with the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs.2026 Career Success Economics
Episodes
  • Exploring Biotech Frontiers with Dr. Rita Avelar
    Mar 9 2026
    Join us in this insightful episode as we sit down with Dr. Rita Avelar, a lead scientist at CircNova. Discover her inspiring journey from academia to the forefront of biotech innovation. Dr. Avelar shares her experiences transitioning from a postdoc at the University of Michigan to leading groundbreaking research in RNA therapeutics. Learn about the unique challenges and opportunities in the startup world, the importance of networking, and how diverse experiences can shape a successful career in science. Whether you're an aspiring scientist or curious about the biotech industry, this episode offers valuable insights and advice. Tune in to explore the dynamic world of biotech with Dr. Avelar! "[…] there's definitely a supportive environment and communication that has to happen between you and your postdoctoral mentor in order for them to even know how to help you." Dr. Rita Avelar Guest Rita Avelar obtained her PhD in Molecular and Cellular Pathology from the University of Michigan in 2023. She completed her postdoctoral training at the University of Michigan in 2025, and is now Lead Scientist of Research and Translational Discovery at CircNova. With her team, she aims to leverage their NovaEngine™️AI-platform to discover novel and more durable non-coding RNA therapeutics, to target the undruggable and unlock new treatment options for patients with unmet clinical needs. Connect with Rita on LinkedIn Resources Luck is no Accident: Making the Most of Happenstance in Your Life and Career, book by John D. Krumboltz and Al S. Levin Transcript Anne-Sophie Bohrer Hello everyone and welcome to 'What's Up, Doc?', an initiative developed by the University of Michigan Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. 'What's Up, Doc?' is a professional development interview series created to support the career exploration effort and professional development needs of current U-M postdocs. You will hear from former U-M postdocs discuss their own postdoc experience and share advice on their experience transitioning into their career of choice. We hope you will get the answers you want and need to make an informed decision about your own career. I am Anne-Sophie Bohrer Maurinne Bonnet And I am Maurinne Bonnet. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Today our guest is Doctor Rita Avelar, who completed her postdoc at the University of Michigan in 2025. Rita is now the lead scientist of research and translational discovery at CircNova in Ann Arbor. Welcome Rita and thank you for joining us. Rita Avelar Thank you for having me. It's a pleasure to be here. Maurinne Bonnet Hi Rita, welcome. Before we dive into what you actually do in your new job, could you please introduce yourself and, with a bit of your background, how did you end up doing your postdoc at the U of M? Rita Avelar Yeah. So I started my postdoc right after I graduated from my PhD, also at the University of Michigan. I did my PhD with Doctor DiFeo in the pathology department and it felt like the right fit for me to stay a little longer to continue the project that I had during my PhD to see it published and also to expand my expertise from this lab and actually leverage their collaborations at the time, which actually led me to the job that I have today. Anne-Sophie Bohrer So you work for CircNova. Can you tell us a little bit about that company and what they do? Rita Avelar Yeah. So CircNova is actually a biotech that is located in Ann Arbor here in Michigan. And what we do, we use our AI driven drug discovery to accelerate the development of RNA therapeutics. So what that really means is that we are using our proprietary AI Nova engine technology in order to help us predict the RNA structure, binding affinities and biological function to help us engineer new medicines and therapeutic approaches and hope to treat human disease. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Very cool. So like I said earlier, you're the lead scientist. So can you tell us a little bit about what this role entails, what it's like, what it looks like day-to-day? Rita Avelar Yeah. So as the lead scientist, what I really do is to establish and direct all CircNova's experimental biology programs and platforms. So what I really do, and what I'm responsible to do, is to bridge the molecular biology in human disease with the drug discovery to accelerate CircNova's pipeline from early stage innovation to hopefully translational discovery. So my day-to-day really is to help design, execute, and oversee the wet lab research. So I seek to validate all the RNA therapeutics that are generated through our AI and then advance the discovery platforms and introduce the therapeutic programs that we have in collaboration with other biotechs as well as academic institutions. Anne-Sophie Bohrer So it seems that you collaborate with a lot of people. So how many people work at CircNova? Rita Avelar Yeah. So we actually are a smaller biotech right now. We've been around for about two years and right now we are a total of 11 employees. Anne-Sophie Bohrer...
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    31 mins
  • Building a Career in Tech Transfer: Insights from Dr. Megan Griffin
    Mar 9 2026
    Megan Griffin holds a BS in Biotechnology and Molecular Biology from Michigan State University and obtained her PhD in Developmental and Molecular Biology from the University of Cincinnati. She completed her postdoctoral training at the University of Michigan in 2020 and later was an U-M Innovation Partnerships fellow from 2020 to 2022. Megan is now the Assistant Director of Licensing at U-M Innovation Partnerships. In her role, she guides U-M innovators through the process of protecting their intellectual property and commercializing it through licensing to an interested company or creating a new startup venture. Connect with Megan on LinkedIn Resources U-M Innovation Partnerships miLEAD Consulting GroupNucleateNSF I-Corps program Transcript Anne-Sophie Bohrer Hello everyone and welcome to 'What's Up, Doc?', an initiative developed by the University of Michigan Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. 'What's Up, Doc?' is a professional development interview series created to support the career exploration efforts and professional development needs of current U-M postdocs. You will hear from former U-M postdocs discuss their own postdoc experience and share advice on their experience transitioning into their career of choice. We hope you will get the answers you want and need to make an informed decision about your own career. I am Anne-Sophie Bohrer Maurinne Bonnet And I am Maurinne Bonnet. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Today, our guest is Doctor Megan Griffin, who completed her postdoc at the University of Michigan in 2020. Megan is now working at the University of Michigan Innovation Partnerships as an Assistant Director of licensing. Welcome, Megan, and thank you for joining us. Megan Griffin Thank you for having me. Maurinne Bonnet Hey, Megan, it's a pleasure to have you today. So as Anne-Sophie said, you are currently working at Innovation Partnerships, so for some, some of us who are not familiar with that, could you briefly tell us more about this office, what are its main missions, what what are you doing there? Megan Griffin Sure. Yeah. So Innovation Partnerships was recently rebranded, used to be the Office of Technology Transfer here at the University of Michigan. And we rebranded really to capture a wider array of things that we do. So we're sort of divided into 3 branches. I work with the licensing team, we have a ventures team and we have our corporate and foundation research alliances team. So collectively, all of these groups work closely together, and our overall mission is really to help faculty or students or staff, whoever at the university that has innovative research, get that research out to the public. So really our our core mission statement is that we want every piece of research at the University of Michigan have the opportunity to impact the world. So we do this by helping to protect intellectual property that can be in the form of patents or copyrights or, you know, sometimes we can license things without protection, and then we also will try to get it to the world, either through licensing that to companies, help people create their own startup companies, uhm connect people with funding resources, that's another thing we do. So we have a couple of internal translation funds that we manage that are meant to fund the gaps in research to get it to a point where it's ready to be commercialized. And we also have investment funds for creating startup ventures. Uhm, so it's kind of, you know, overall the overarching goal of our office. And if you want to know more about the specific branches, I can get into more detail. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Cool. Well, that's really interesting. Uhm, so clearly you're still somehow and somewhat involved with the science, uhm, but you're not at the bench anymore, you're not in the lab anymore. And so can you tell us a little bit about your background and really what led you to choose to pursue this career? Megan Griffin Yeah, absolutely. So my background is in life sciences, I got a PhD at the University of Cincinnati in molecular and developmental biology. As I was wrapping up my graduate career, I was starting to think about what I wanted to do overall and I hadn't really quite settled on a career path. That was the first time I heard of tech transfer and I thought" Huh, that sounds kind of interesting, let me find out more." So I met with the tech transfer office at the Children's Hospital where I was doing my research, and sort of found out more about the career, but at that point I was about to graduate, it was a little late to get involved with them, uhm, and they told me that, you know, some schools have these internship opportunities available that you might be able to do if you choose to do a postdoc or something like that or maybe you can directly apply. So I decided to do a postdoc to keep my options open, so to speak. I hadn't totally ruled out the traditional route of, uhm, you know, trying to get a professor position, uhm, but I was sort of leaning ...
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    27 mins
  • From Bench Science to Sales with Dr. Emily Sherman
    Mar 9 2026
    Emily Sherman holds a BS in Chemistry from Ithaca College and obtained her PhD in chemical biology in 2020 at the University of Michigan. She then completed her postdoctoral training at the University of Michigan in 2021. Emily is an Account Executive for Takara, a life sciences regents company, where she started as Territory Manager. She manages a portfolio of clients across multiple states in the midwest, ensuring customer satisfaction and managing the sales cycle. As a fun fact, Emily has spent several months sailing around the world as a passenger on a ship in 2015. Connect with Emily on LinkedIn Resources miLEAD Consulting GroupU-M Innovation Partnerships How to Use the STAR Interview Response Technique (Indeed, Oct. 2, 2025) Transcript Anne-Sophie Bohrer Hello everyone and welcome to 'What's up, Doc?', an initiative developed by the University of Michigan Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. "What's Up, Doc?' is a professional development interview series created to support the career exploration efforts and professional development needs of current UM postdocs. You will hear from former UM postdocs discuss their own postdoc experience and share advice on their experience transitioning into their career of choice. We hope you will get the answers you want and need to make an informed decision about your own career. I am Anne-Sophie Bohrer. Maurinne Bonnet And I am Maurinne Bonnet. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Today we are joined by our guest, Doctor Emily Sherman. Emily obtained her Ph.D. in chemical biology from the University of Michigan in 2020 and completed her postdoc in the Michigan Medical School in 2021. After her postdoc Emily joined Takara as a territory manager, where she is now an accounts manager. Welcome, Emily, and thank you for joining us. Emily Sherman Thank you guys for having me. I'm excited to chat. Maurinne Bonnet Yeah. We're so excited to have you here. So, Emily, like Anne-Sophie said, you are currently working at Takara. So I guess the first question would be, could you briefly tell us about your company? What are you guys doing there? Emily Sherman Yeah, for sure. So Takara Bio is a Japanese company, we have a wholly owned subsidiary in the U.S. called Takara Bio USA. So you know we think of like Thermo as kind of the Amazon of the life sciences reagents company. Takara is like a smaller vendor in that same space. So at the core, we're an enzyme company, so a lot of people know us for things like polymerases, cloning, Next Gen. sequencing, but we've really expanded into a lot of other areas like cell and gene therapy. Kind of anything molecular biology we have reagents for so, we have thousands of products all across kind of the life sciences. Anne-Sophie Bohrer Great. So Emily, let's go back to 2021. When you transition from a bench position to a sales role. So how did you choose to pursue this career and when did you make that choice? Emily Sherman Yeah. So you know what's funny is sales was really not on my radar at all admittedly. When I was, you know, in my training for PhD and postdoc, I didn't even really know that it was an option, to be honest with you, my, my only experience with sales reps in the lab would be like, you know, the pipette people, the gloves people, that kind of just come barging into the lab and (laugh) ask you who you're getting your plastics from. And, you know, they leave a flyer or something and leave. So a recruiter actually reached out to me for my current role, and honestly, when she first called me and asked, you know, Iis this something you ever thought about as a career?" I was kind of like, uhm, no (laughs). Like honestly I was, I was not sure if I was interested and she was like "You know, just let me send you the the job descriptions, what kind of person Takara specifically was looking for." And they were interested in, like, someone with a science background, a Ph.D. So, you know, it was, it was really tough times. Like, I defended my Ph.D. in 2020 and I I did a postdoc with my mentor kind of knowing he was just opening his first lab and he really knew the whole time that, you know, I was really just looking for my next position. Uhm, so I was kind of job searching, it was during the pandemic. It was just a really tough time to find jobs, much like it is now to be totally honest with you. So you know this recruiter reached out and I was like "You know, at least you know it would allow me to stay here in Michigan." I was looking to move into industry and I did not want to move to the coast. So a lot of times, if you want a career in like R&D in biotech space, you kind of have to move to like San Diego, San Francisco, Boston, maybe New York. And I really wanted to stay here in the Midwest and it's a lot of, like, small startups and it's kind of tough to find positions in, you know, the Ann Arbor area specifically. So that's why I was open to this recruiter when she talked to me and I looked through the job description. When I looked at the salary, ...
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    31 mins
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