精品国产一区二区桃色

Member News

Protein Society announces 2022 awards

ASBMB Today Staff
June 20, 2022

The Protein Society has announced its list of 2022 award winners, with the awards themselves to be conferred at the society's annual meeting in July. Among those recognized were 精品国产一区二区桃色 members Squire Booker, Daniel Herschlag and Nozomi Ando.

Squire Booker
Daniel Herschlag
Nozomi Ando

received the Hans Neurath Award, which recognizes individuals who have recently made a “contribution of exceptional merit to basic protein research.” Booker, a professor at Penn State University, studies biosynthetic enzymes that use S-adenosylmethionine and iron-sulfur clusters as radical catalysts. The Protein Society award announcement noted his lab's recent development of a new way around a challenge in studying radical-SAM enzymes with cobalamin cofactors, which produce important antibiotics. Of particular interest, the lab showed a mechanism by which an enzyme can extend a fully saturated hydrocarbon chain one carbon at a time.

Booker is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and a member of the ASBMB’s Nominating Committee. In the past, he has led the Maximizing Access Committee and served on the Meetings Committee, Finance Committee and Program Planning Committee, as well as the editorial board of the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

received the Stein and Moore Award, which recognizes "eminent leaders in protein science who have made sustained high-impact research contributions to the field." Herschlag, an enzymologist, pioneered the concept of catalytic promiscuity, which has become important both for understanding proteins' evolutionary history and for accomplishing directed evolution. He, his lab and his collaborators are responsible for the RNA chaperone hypothesis, for demonstrating that RNA binding proteins play ubiquitous roles in gene expression, and for developing a microfluidic platform for the parallel biochemical characterization of thousands of enzymes.

In 2010, Herschlag received the ASBMB William C. Rose Award, which recognizes outstanding contributions to biochemical and molecular biological research and a demonstrated commitment to the training of younger scientists.

was one of two recipients of the Protein Science Young Investigator Award, which recognizes scientists in the first eight years of their independent careers. Ando is an associate professor at Cornell University, where she works on new methods for using diffuse scattering data from X-ray diffraction images of protein crystals to obtain information about movement within proteins. The lab has found that there are two types of correlated motion in protein crystals: those within a single protein, and those that connect two or more individual protein units. The finding has implications for our understanding of how allostery works.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

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

Learn more
ASBMB Today Staff

This article was written by a member or members of the ASBMB Today staff.

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.