精品国产一区二区桃色

Profile

Stark raving mad for science

George Stark鈥檚 enthusiasm for understanding signaling pathways and developing biochemical methods is infectious
Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay
June 1, 2012

of the Cleveland Clinic is as comfortable in a kitchen as he is in a laboratory. The son of a restaurant owner, Stark says, “learning how to handle myself in a restaurant was good training for how to be a good chemist.” In fact, an extremely good biochemist. Stark’s scientific accomplishments, such as the development of Northern blotting for detecting RNA and the discovery of the JAK-STAT signaling pathway, have garnered him many accolades, including the 2011 , awarded by the 精品国产一区二区桃色 each year for excellence in biological chemistry and molecular biology (1).

Photo of George Stark 
George Stark remains committed to developing methods and understanding the fundamentals of signaling pathways. Photo courtesy of George Stark 

As a boy in the 1940s, Stark spent hours working in his father’s eatery, Stark’s Beef and Beans, in Washington, D.C. Watching his father’s struggles made Stark decide at a young age that the restaurant business was not for him. His father agreed. His father, whom Stark describes as “a dominant personality … a go-out-and-get-’em business man,” had grand plans for his only son (Stark has two older sisters). “It was the typical ‘My son should be a doctor!’” says Stark with a laugh.

Stark’s mother was a quiet woman who worked as a bookkeeper to hold the family steady through the highs and lows of the restaurant business. His parents didn’t know much about science, Stark says, but, based on what they were aware of, they encouraged him to pursue medicine. To get the boy started, the family moved to New York City so Stark could attend the Bronx High School of Science for his senior year.

He went on to Columbia College for his undergraduate degree, but as he got more into his premedical school studies, Stark says, he realized he really wanted to do research, not medicine. A comparative anatomy class cemented the decision. “Looking at a bunch of pins stuck in a dissected frog and trying to remember the names of what was underneath each pin was daunting for me,” he says. “I can remember things very well if I can link them in a logical chain, but the names of all these nerves and so forth in the frog were not linkable in a logical chain for me!”

In what he calls an act of self-defense to avoid medical school, Stark stayed on at Columbia for graduate school in the laboratory of his undergraduate adviser, Charles Dawson, to study ascorbate oxidase from yellow crook-necked squash. for The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Stark recalls spending happy hours in the cold room peeling mounds of the vegetable because the enzyme was concentrated in its skin (2).

Stark followed his graduate studies with a stint at The Rockefeller University as a postdoctoral fellow with soon-to-be Nobel laureates Stanford Moore and William Stein, who had invented the amino acid analyzer and sequenced bovine pancreatic ribonuclease. It was also during this time that Stark met a physicist who became his wife and, for several years, labmate. Stark has described Mary Beck as “the glue that holds one’s life together.”

Stanford

Stark’s work on carbamylation to identify the amino-terminal residues of proteins and aspartate transcarbamylase attracted the attention of Arthur Kornberg, who recruited him to Stanford University in the early 1960s. There, in the 1970s, Stark’s group developed Northern blotting. At that time, RNA was detected by separating an RNA mixture in a tube gel, freezing the gel, and “putting it in a device like an egg slicer and cutting it into 100 or so pieces,” says Stark. Each gel piece was hybridized with a complementary RNA probe to see which gel piece contained the RNA in question. The method, Stark says, was “ridiculously cumbersome.” His group decided to do better.

They had figured out in 1975 how to make chemically reactive cellulose that would covalently bind to DNA and RNA (3). Stark’s group then made chemically reactive cellulose paper onto which they could attach RNA molecules from a gel. They then probed the entire paper with the complementary nucleic acid chain (4). “It actually worked the first time we tried it,” says Stark.

Stark’s sense of humor came through when they named the technique “Northern blotting” as a joke on Southern blotting, which Edwin Southern at Oxford University had developed for DNA detection (5). Similarly, Stark’s group did the first demonstration of the idea of transferring proteins out of gels for detection (6, 7).

It was also at Stanford that Stark’s group discovered PALA, an abbreviation for N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (8). The molecule is the analog of aspartate transcarbamylase’s transition state. Stark’s group discovered that PALA was a strong inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase and that it could enter mammalian cells to block pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis.

With PALA, Stark and colleagues went on to discover the giant polypeptide CAD that contained aspartate transcarbamylase, carbamyl phosphate synthetase and dihydro-orotase, all involved in pyrimidine synthesis. By studying CAD, Stark’s group was one of the first to show gene amplification in mammalian cells.

An American in London

In 1983, after 20 years at Stanford, Stark landed in London at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund. His research interests had moved from protein biochemistry to cellular and molecular biology, and he was interested in interferon-dependent signaling, an area in which he worked in collaboration with Ian Kerr at the U.K. Medical Research Council.

“London is a wonderful place to live,” says Stark. “We were very privileged, because we owned a house in California that we were basically able to trade for a nice house in central London.” Stark says that the environment at ICRF was also special. “My lab was completely funded. I didn’t have to write any grants. All I had to do was show up for a review every five years,” he explains. “It was heaven for somebody like me who wanted to primarily do research.”

Part of his group in London worked on mechanisms of gene amplification, and the rest worked on interferon signaling pathways, research that later led to the discovery of the JAK-STAT pathway (9). The group also developed an approach called validation-based insertional mutagenesis (10).

But Stark’s idyllic world was in for a nasty surprise nine years later. “I realized I was going to have to retire in the British system in a couple of more years!” he says. Stark would have had to have stopped working in 1995 at age 62.

Back in the U.S.

Determined not to be forced out, Stark found another position in 1992 at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, where a vacancy popped up after Bernadine Healy moved to become head of the National Institutes of Health under President George H.W. Bush. Twenty years later, his laboratory still continues to forge ahead on interferons, STAT1 and NFκB research.

His group has found that the mutagenesis approach they have developed can be powerful. “It is a way to upregulate gene expression randomly in a population of cells,” explains Stark. “If upregulation of a protein in one cell out of millions in a population gives you an interesting phenotype and you have a way to find that cell by selection or something else, then that can lead to a novel research project.”

Photo of George Stark and his family 
Stark with his wife, Mary Beck; son, Robert; and daughter, Janna. Photo courtesy of George Stark. 

For instance, Stark’s group has an interest in lysine methylation of transcription factors, a mechanism that affects gene expression. With the mutagenesis approach, “we found upregulation of a demethylase that affected the function of NFκB,” says Stark (11). “We’ve also used that method a lot in finding new mechanisms of drug resistance” (12).

Immersed as he is, Stark still manages to have a life outside of science. “I like to cook. I enjoy sports, mostly now as a viewer rather than a participant!” he says. “I love classical music. I did sing together with Mary a lot. We were in choruses in New York and California.” The Starks also are enthusiastic concert and theater goers and collect art pieces, such as Japanese prints and Inuit sculptures.

But Stark continues to be leery of retirement. He has reduced his load of administrative work so he can have more free time to spend with his family. But he is absolutely certain of one thing: “I don’t want to give up science,” he says. “I don’t want to quit.”

References

  1. Zagorski, N. George Stark to give 2011 annual meeting opening lecture. ASBMB Today, .
  2. Stark, G.R. J. Biol. Chem.280, (2005).
  3. Noyes, B.E. & Stark, G.R. Cell 5, (1975).
  4. Renart, J.; Reiser, J.; & Stark, G.R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, (1979).
  5. Southern, E.M. J. Mol. Biol.98, (1975).
  6. Alwine, J.C.; Kemp, D.J.; & Stark, G.R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, (1977).
  7. Mukhopadhyay, R. The men behind Western blotting. ASBMB Today, .
  8. Kresge, N.; Simoni, R.D.; & Hill, R.L. J. Biol. Chem. 282, (2007).
  9. Kandel, E.S. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 102, (2005).
  10. Velazquez, L. et al. Cell70, (1992).
  11. Tao, L. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106, (2009).
  12. Canhui Guo & Stark, G.R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 108, (2011).

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay

Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay is the former managing editor of ASBMB Today.

Featured jobs

from the

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

In memoriam: Ralph G. Yount
In Memoriam

In memoriam: Ralph G. Yount

July 28, 2025

He was a professor emeritus of chemistry and biochemistry at Washington State University and an ASBMB member for 58 years.

From dust to discovery
Profile

From dust to discovery

July 23, 2025

From makeshift classrooms in Uganda to postdoctoral research in Chicago, MOSAIC scholar Elizabeth Kaweesa builds a legacy in women鈥檚 health.

Fliesler wins scientific and ethical awards
Member News

Fliesler wins scientific and ethical awards

July 21, 2025

He is being honored by the University at Buffalo and the American Oil Chemists' Society for his scientific achievements and ethical integrity.

Hope for a cure hangs on research
Essay

Hope for a cure hangs on research

July 17, 2025

Amid drastic proposed cuts to biomedical research, rare disease families like Hailey Adkisson鈥檚 fight for survival and hope. Without funding, science can鈥檛 鈥渃atch up鈥 to help the patients who need it most.

Before we鈥檝e lost what we can鈥檛 rebuild: Hope for prion disease
Feature

Before we鈥檝e lost what we can鈥檛 rebuild: Hope for prion disease

July 15, 2025

Sonia Vallabh and Eric Minikel, a husband-and-wife team racing to cure prion disease, helped develop ION717, an antisense oligonucleotide treatment now in clinical trials. Their mission is personal 鈥 and just getting started.

ASBMB members recognized as Allen investigators
Member News

ASBMB members recognized as Allen investigators

July 14, 2025

Ileana Cristea, Sarah Cohen, Itay Budin and Christopher Obara are among 14 researchers selected as Allen Distinguished Investigators by the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.