Key Points
- Tian (Autumn) Qiu has been named one of the ASMS 2025 Research Award winners, and received her award at the ASMS conference in Baltimore.
- Christy Haynes (University of Minnesota) and Jonathan Sweedler (University of Illinois) helped shape Qiu's career while shaping how she handles research.
- She suggests future scientists should keep up with modern technologies and be collaborative alongside fellow researchers.
Every year at the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (ASMS) conference, awards are presented to honor veteran and newcomer researchers making notable contributions in the field of mass spectrometry (MS). Example of these awards are the research awards (1). These awards promote the research of academic scientists within the first four years of joining the tenure track or research faculty of a North American University at the time the award is conferred. The awards are presented annually and fully funded by Bruker, Thermo Fisher Scientific, and Waters Corporation. This year, one of the Research Award winners was Tian (Autumn) Qiu of Michigan State University.
Qiu is an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at Michigan State University (2). She received her bachelor’s degree and PhD, both in chemistry, from Peking University and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, respectively. After receiving her degrees, she was a Beckman Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her current research focuses on using analytical chemistry, toxicology, microbiology, and neuroscience, to elucidate the chemical basis of environment-host-microbe interactions. Her research group investigates molecular interactions between environmental exposures, microbial metabolism, and host animal responses using mass spectrometry (MS) methods, particularly matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)-MS for MS imaging and high-throughput profiling, together with animal models, biochemical analyses, and toxicological assays.
Recently, we sat down with Qiu to learn about her career and how she got to where she is now. In the penultimate section of our interview, Qiu discusses the most important lessons she took from her mentors and what advice she would like future generations of researchers to know.