List of biophysicists

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of persons known for their research in biophysics.[1]

A[]

B[]

Carlos Bustamante
  •  — protein folding[2][3]
  • David Baker — Protein structure prediction; protein design; Rosetta software
  • Adriaan (Ad) Bax (Dutch-born American, 1956–) — development of methodology for NMR (Nuclear magnetic resonance) spectroscopy
  • Georg von Bék��sy (Hungarian, 1899–1972) — research on the human ear[1]
  • Boris Pavlovich Belousov — known for discovery of Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction
  • Howard Berg (American, 1934–) — characterized properties of bacterial chemotaxis
  • Helen M. Berman (American, 1943–) — pioneer in study of nucleic acid structure; head of the worldwide Protein Data Bank
  • John Desmond Bernal (Irish-born English, 1901–1971) — X-ray crystallography of plant viruses and proteins
  • Pamela J. Bjorkman (American, 1956–) — first X-ray crystallography of human histocompatibility complex; studies immune recognition, homologs of MHC proteins, and improved antibodies against HIV
  • Steven Block (American, 1952–) — observed the motions of enzymes such as kinesin and RNA polymerase with optical tweezers
  • Sir Tom Blundell — crystal structures of HIV protease, renin, insulin and other hormones, growth factors, receptors, and proteins important in cell signalling and DNA repair; developed structure-guided and fragment-based approaches to drug design
  • Jagadish Chandra Bose (Indian, 1858–1937)[1]
  • Detlev Wulf Bronk (American, 1897–1975) [1]
  • Axel Brunger — developed the free R cross-validation index and the X-PLOR/CNS software for macromolecular crystallography
  • Carlos Bustamante (Peruvian-born American, 1951–) — known for single-molecule biophysics of molecular motors and biological polymer physics

C[]

Francis Crick
  • Charles Cantor — Director, Center for Advanced Biotechnology, Boston University. Cantor is a molecular geneticist who developed pulse field electrophoresis for very large DNA molecules with David C. Schwartz in 1984, by adding an alternating voltage gradient to standard gel electrophoresis.
  • Donald Caspar — theory of quasi-equivalence in icosahedral viruses
  • Alexander Chizhevsky — founder of heliobiology
  • Wah Chiu — cryo electron microscopy; virus structure; high-resolution cryoEM
  • Steven Chu — Nobel laureate who helped develop optical trapping techniques used by many biophysicists
  • G. Marius Clore FRS (British and American) — pioneer of multidimensional macromolecular NMR spectroscopy laying foundations of 3D structure determination of proteins in solution, and discovery of rare, invisible conformational states of macromolecules
  • Carolyn Cohen — in 1969, Cohen codiscovered the molecular structure of tropomyosin as a polar coiled coil, also being the first protein crystal structure determined with a 20Å resolution via x-ray crystallography. On the route to this discovey, she also discovered a novel crystal structure, termed the Cohen-Longley paracrystal with 400Å periodicity, in 1966.
  • Robert Corey — co-discoverer (with Linus Pauling) of the alpha helix and beta sheet structures in proteins
  • Allan McLeod Cormack — development (with Godfrey Hounsfield) of computer assisted tomography
  • Christoph Cremer — overcoming the conventional limit of resolution that applies to light based investigations (the Abbe limit) by a range of different methods like SPDM and SMI
  • Francis Crick — co-discoverer of the structure of DNA. Later participated in the Crick, Brenner et al. experiment which established the basis for understanding the genetic code.

D[]

  • Johann Deisenhofer (German and American) — solved first three-dimensional structure of membrane protein
  • Max Delbrück — discovered that bacteria become resistant to phages as a result of genetic mutations. Delbrück, Salvador Luria, and Alfred Hershey shared the 1969 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "for their discoveries concerning the replication mechanism and the genetic structure of viruses"
  • Emilio Del Giudice (Italian, 1940–2014) — water research
  • (American) — developed 3-D reconstruction methods for electron microscopy[4]
  • Friedrich Dessauer — research on radiation, especially X-rays
  • Ken A. Dill (American, 1947–) — research on folding pathways of proteins.
  • Christopher Dobson (British, 1949–) — protein folding and misfolding
  • Jennifer Doudna (American, 1964–) — structures of large RNAs; pioneer in CRISPR research
  • Leslie Dutton (British and American) — Oxidoreductase function and design.

E[]

F[]

G[]

Luigi Galvani

H[]

  • Taekjip Ha (South-Korean-born American, 1968–) — single-molecule biophysics
  • Hermann von Helmholtz (Prussian-born German, 1821–1894) — first to measure the velocity of nerve impulses; studied hearing and vision
  • Stefan Hell — developed the principle of STED microscopy
  • Richard Henderson — scientist at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, developed the use of cryo-EM to study membrane protein structures.
  • Wayne Hendrickson — developed robust methods of phasing and refinement for protein crystallography
  • A.V. Hill (English, 1886–1977) — Nobel laureate, Hill coefficient for cooperativity in enzyme kinetics, physics of nerves and muscles
  • Alan Hodgkin — mathematical theory of how ion fluxes produce nerve impulses (with Andrew Huxley)
  • Dorothy Hodgkin (English, 1910–1994) — winner of the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, known for determining the structures of penicillin, vitamin B12, and insulin
  • Alexander Hollaender (American, 1898–1986) — founded the science of radiation biology; early evidence for nucleic acid as the genetic material
  • Barry H. Honig (American) — pioneered theory and computation for electrostatics in biological macromolecules[8]
  • John J. Hopfield — worked on error correction in transcription and translation (kinetic proofreading), and associative memory models (Hopfield net)
  • Arthur L. Horwich — chaperonins
  • Godfrey Hounsfield — development (with Allan Cormack) of computer assisted tomography
  • Wayne L. Hubbell — circa 1989, he oversaw the development of the technique termed site-directed spin labeling (SDSL), used for determining protein structure and dynamics through genetically creating an attachment point for a nitroxide spin labeled probe. The technique allows insight on the nature of how a protein's structure and conformational changes create/form protein function.
  • Andrew Huxley — mathematical theory of how ion fluxes produce nerve impulses (with Alan Hodgkin)
  • Hugh Huxley (English, 1924–) — muscle structure and contraction
  • James S. Hyde (American Biophysicist, 1934–) — Developer of EPR and MRI instrumentation, holder of 35 U.S. Patents

I[]

J[]

  • Louise Johnson (English, 1940–2012) — Crystal structure of lysozyme (1st enzyme) with David Phillips, then glycogen phosphorylase. Wrote influential crystallography textbook with Tom Blundell.[9]
  • Pascual Jordan (German, 1902–1980)[1]

K[]

John Kendrew with model of myoglobin in progress.
Brian Kobilka

L[]

M[]

  • Roderick MacKinnon — determined first three-dimensional structure of voltage-gated transmembrane ion channel
  • David H. MacLennan (Canadian)
  • Marvin Makinen — pioneer of the structural basis of enzyme action
  • Peter Mansfield — development of magnetic resonance imaging
  • Brian W. Matthews (Australian-born American) — explicated the energetic and structural effects of mutations in proteins, using phage T4 lysozyme studied by protein crystallography
  • Ann McDermott — study of biological samples using solid-state NMR[11]
  • (Finnish, 1933–2005)[citation needed]
  • Peter D. Mitchell — discovered the chemiosmotic mechanism of ATP synthesis
  • Manuel Morales (Honduran-born American, 1919–2009) — molecular basis of muscle contraction
  • Hermann Joseph Muller — discovered that X-rays cause mutations

N[]

O[]

  • Seiji Ogawa (Japanese, 1934–) — development of functional magnetic resonance imaging
  • Wilma Olson  — Professor at Rutgers, pioneer in study of DNA structure

P[]

Linus Pauling
  • George Palade — Nobel Laureate in physiology or medicine for protein secretion and cell ultra-structure from electron microscopy studies
  • Linus Pauling — co-discoverer (with Robert Corey) of the alpha helix and beta sheet structures in proteins
  • Max Perutz — pioneer of protein crystallography
  •  — biophysicist and cognitive scientist; organized the first conference on biolinguistics[citation needed]
  • Ernest C. Pollard — founder of the Biophysical Society
  • Fritz-Albert Popp (German, 1938–) — biophoton research and coherence systems in biology
  •  —protein folding[12]
  •  — pioneered applications of NMR spectroscopy in studying RNA structure and single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in studying the dynamics of protein synthesis[citation needed]
  • Bernard Pullman — pioneered applications of Quantum Chemistry in Biology

Q[]

R[]

Venki Ramakrishnan
  • Sir George Radda (György Károly Radda) — early developer of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Gopalasamudram Narayana Iyer Ramachandran — famous for the Ramachandran plot of protein backbone conformation
  • Venkatraman (Venki) Ramakrishnan (Indian-born American and British, 1952– ) — winner of 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (with Steitz and Yonath) for crystal structure of the 30S subunit of the bacterial ribosome
  • Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy — solid-state NMR
  • Sir John Randall — X-ray and neutron diffraction of proteins and DNA
  • Zihe Rao (Chinese) — structural biologist, member Chinese Academy of Sciences, president of Nankai University[13]
  • Nicolas Rashevsky,[14] former Editor of the first journal of mathematical and theoretical biophysics entitled " The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics " (1940–1973) and author of the two-factor model of neuronal excitation, biotopology and organismic set theory
  • Frederic M. Richards
  • Jane Richardson (American, 1941–) — developed the ribbon diagram for representing the 3D structure of proteins; with husband David, developed MolProbity structure-validation web service
  • Robert Rosen — theoretical biophysicist and mathematical biologist, author of: metabolic-replication systems, categories of metabolic and genetic networks, quantum genetics in terms of von Neumann's approach, non-reductionist complexity theories, dynamical and anticipatory systems in biology.[15]
  • Michael Rossmann — worked with Max Perutz on the crystal structure of hemoglobin, then in his own lab solved structures of enzymes including lactate dehydrogenase, the prototype of the Rossmann fold, and of many viruses including the common cold virus.
  • Benoit Roux — continues to conduct research at the University of Chicago in classical molecular dynamics and other theoretical techniques to determine the function of biological systems on the molecular level. He is a distinguished pioneer in the study of membrane proteins and bridging the gap between theoretical and experimental biophysics through computation.

S[]

T[]

Dame Janet M. Thornton

V[]

W[]

Monument to Maurice Wilkins & DNA, Pongoroa NZ
  • Douglas Warrick — specializing in bird flight (hummingbirds and pigeons)
  • Arieh Warshel (Israeli-born American, 1940–) — development of QM/MM approaches for a quantitative understanding of enzymatic reactions; introduction of molecular dynamics simulations in biology; introduction of consistent electrostatic calculations in proteins.
  • James D. Watson — co-discoverer of the structure of DNA.
  • Anthony Watts — early proponent of the idea of both structural and functional significance of “Lipid-protein interactions”, and developer of solid state NMR for biology.
  • Watt W. Webb — developer of multiphoton microscopy
  • Gregorio Weber
  • John Wikswo — research on biomagnetism and cardiac electrophysiology
  • Don Craig Wiley — applied molecular biophysics to study of viruses[18]
  • Maurice Wilkins (New Zealand-born British, 1916–2004) — pioneer of DNA crystallography and co-discoverer of the structure of DNA.[1]
  • Kurt Wüthrich — Nobel Laureate in physiology or medicine for 2D-FT NMR of protein structure in solution[19]

X[]

Y[]

Ada Yonath at the Weizmann Institute
  • King-Wai Yau (Chinese-born American, 1948–) — fundamental contributions to understanding the mechanisms of sensory transduction in rod, cone, and non-image visual systems and in olfaction
  • Ada Yonath (Israeli, 1939–) — winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (with Steitz and Ramakrishnan) for solving the crystal structure of the large subunit of the ribosome
  • Douglas Youvan — light reactions of photosynthesis, genetic code, imaging spectroscopy and directed evolution

Z[]

  • Bruno Zimm — co-developer of the Zimm-Bragg model of helix formation

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Gillispie, Charles Coulston, ed. (2008). Complete dictionary of scientific biography. Detroit, Mich.: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-31559-1.
  2. ^ "Founders Award". Biophysical Society. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
  3. ^ Baldwin, Robert L. (2008). "The Search for Folding Intermediates and the Mechanism of Protein Folding". Annual Review of Biophysics. 37 (1): 1–21. doi:10.1146/annurev.biophys.37.032807.125948. PMID 18573070.
  4. ^ "2013 Society Awards Recipients". Microscopy Society of America. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
  5. ^ "Englander, S. Walter". Citation for election to the National Academy. National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved April 30, 2013.CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ Mossman, K. (2007). "Profile of Joachim Frank". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (50): 19668–19670. Bibcode:2007PNAS..10419668M. doi:10.1073/pnas.0710323105. PMC 2148354. PMID 18056798.
  7. ^ Jim Swyers (May 14, 2007). "Pitt Medical School's Gronenborn Elected A Member of National Academy of Sciences". PittChronicle. University of Pittsburgh.
  8. ^ "Alexander Hollaender Award in Biophysics". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  9. ^ Thomas L. Blundell, Louise N. Johnson (1976). Protein Crystallography. Academic Press.
  10. ^ "The Nobel prize in chemistry 2013". Nobelprize.org. Nobel Media AB 2014. Retrieved 9 Oct 2014.
  11. ^ "McDermott, Ann E." National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  12. ^ Finkelstein, Alexei (1999). "Obituary: Oleg B. Ptitsyn". Nature Structural & Molecular Biology. 6 (5): 413. doi:10.1038/8211.
  13. ^ "Awardee of life sciences prize: Rao Zihe". The Holeung Ho Lee Foundation. 2006. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
  14. ^ "Nicolas Rashevsky". Version 8. PlanetMath.org. Retrieved 29 July 2012.CS1 maint: others (link)
  15. ^ "Robert Rosen". Version 9. PlanetMath.org. Retrieved 29 July 2012.CS1 maint: others (link)
  16. ^ Weiss, Ellen R. (August 27, 2010). "Biophysical Society Names 2011 Award Recipients" (PDF) (Press release). Biophysical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 23, 2014. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  17. ^ Nuzzo, R. (2006). "Profile of Chikashi Toyoshima". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103 (5): 1165–1167. Bibcode:2006PNAS..103.1165N. doi:10.1073/pnas.0508495103. PMC 1360550. PMID 16434474.
  18. ^ "Past National Lecturers". Biophysical Society. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  19. ^ "Kurt Wüthrich – Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 2002. Retrieved 29 July 2012.
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