Kennedy received his MS and PhD from the University of Hawaii in Honolulu after attending graduate school there, and his Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers College.[4]
Research
HIV/AIDS vaccine
Kennedy was active in the search for an HIV vaccine for almost as long as the disease has existed. Kennedy has stated, "I first heard about this rare form of cancer that caused an immunodeficiency in 1982 while I was working at Baylor College of Medicine." At the time, it was not yet known that HIV was the cause of this immunodeficiency. Kennedy tells a story that he was encouraged by his mentor to hop on a plane to Washington, D.C. in 1983, whereupon he took a cab to Bethesda, Maryland and entered Robert Gallo's lab.[5]
Other research
Some of Kennedy's other research focused on the immune response to viral hepatitis. Kennedy has also helped to develop hepatitis B vaccines for chimpanzees and proposed their use in humans in a 1986 study.[6][7] His lab also conducted research into immunologic mechanisms of tumor immunity associated with SV40.[8]
^"Ronald Kennedy". Resthaven Funeral Home & Resthaven Memorial Park. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
^Lanford, R. E.; Kanda, P.; Kennedy, R. C. (1986). "Induction of nuclear transport with a synthetic peptide homologous to the SV40 T antigen transport signal". Cell. 46 (4): 575–582. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(86)90883-4. PMID3015419. S2CID26491905.