Elspeth Garman | |
---|---|
Born | Rothbury |
Alma mater | |
Spouse(s) | John James Barnett |
Awards |
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Website | http://www.bioch.ox.ac.uk/aspsite/index.asp?sectionid=garman |
Academic career | |
Fields | Structural biology, crystallography |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Inelastic alpha particle scattering from ¹⁶O and medium mass nuclei in the incident energy range 7-18 MeV |
Doctoral advisor | Kenneth Allen |
Elspeth Frances Garman is a retired professor of molecular biophysics at the University of Oxford and a former President of the British Crystallographic Association. [1] Until 2021 she was also Senior Kurti Research Fellow at Brasenose College, Oxford, [2] where she is now an emeritus fellow. [3] The "Garman limit", which is the radiation dose limit of a cryocooled protein crystal, is named after her.
Garman studied physics at Durham University and then moved to Linacre College, Oxford, for a doctorate in nuclear physics supervised by Kenneth Allen which she completed in 1980. [4] She taught at Lincoln College, St Hilda's College, St Anne's College, Somerville College, and Worcester College, and switched to biophysics in 1987. Since then, she has co-authored more than 150 Protein Data Bank entries and contributed to techniques for macromolecular structure determination. [5] In particular, Garman has been amongst the pioneers of cryoprotection of macromolecular crystals [6] and has made major contributions to the study of the damage that X-rays induce in macromolecular crystals. In a seminal paper in 2006, Garman and collaborators established the radiation dose limit for cryocooled protein crystals, which was named the "Garman limit" after her. [7]
In 2014, she was awarded the Rose Lecture and Medal at Kingston University [8] and the Humanitarian Award of the Women's International Film and Television Showcase. [9] In 2015 she received the Mildred Dresselhaus Senior Award and guest professorship at the Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imaging. [10] In 2016 she received the I. Fankuchen Award of the American Crystallographic Association. [11] [12] [13] In 2008 she was awarded Major Educator by the University of Oxford. In 2014 she was awarded Most Acclaimed Lecturer Award by OUSU as well as an 'Individual Teaching Award' from Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences (MPLS) Division. [14] [15] Garman is the first recipient of the Sosei Heptares Prize, awarded in July 2018. [16] [17] She received an honorary doctorate from Durham University in July 2019. [18] In August 2019, the European Crystallographic Association awarded her the 11th Max Perutz Prize. [19] She was elected Fellow of the American Crystallographic Association in 2019. [20] In 2020 she was awarded the Suffrage Science Life Sciences Award. [21] In 2021 she was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Teaching Award from the Medical Sciences Division of the University of Oxford. [22]
Garman has been involved in over 40 TV and radio programmes. [14] In December 2017, she gave a talk as part of the Illuminating Atoms exhibition at the Royal Albert Hall. [23] In 2014 she was interviewed for BBC Radio 4's programme The Life Scientific . [24] Garman also helped produce a video with the Royal Institution about "Understanding Crystallography". [25] In 2014 she helped to create an animated video with Oxford Sparks on crystallography. [26] In 2010 she gave the Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture "Crystallography One Century AD (after Dorothy)". [27] In 2016 she gave the inaugural Rosalind Franklin memorial lecture as well as the inaugural Lawrence Bragg memorial lecture. [28] [29]
Garman married John James Barnett (1947–2010), an atmospheric physicist, in January 1979. [30] There are three daughters. [31] Garman is a keen rower, and obtained a rowing half-blue in 1978. [32]
X-ray crystallography is the experimental science determining the atomic and molecular structure of a crystal, in which the crystalline structure causes a beam of incident X-rays to diffract into many specific directions. By measuring the angles and intensities of these diffracted beams, a crystallographer can produce a three-dimensional picture of the density of electrons within the crystal. From this electron density, the positions of the atoms in the crystal can be determined, as well as their chemical bonds, crystallographic disorder, and various other information.
Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin was a Nobel Prize-winning English chemist who advanced the technique of X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of biomolecules, which became essential for structural biology.
Lawrence James DeLucas is an American biochemist who flew aboard NASA Space Shuttle mission STS-50 as a Payload Specialist. He was born on July 11, 1950, in Syracuse, New York, and is currently married with three children. His recreational interests include basketball, scuba diving, bowling, model airplanes, astronomy and reading.
The Henderson limit is the X-ray dose (energy per unit mass) a cryo-cooled crystal can absorb before the diffraction pattern decays to half of its original intensity. Its value is defined as 2 × 107 Gy (J/kg).
M. R. N. Murthy, was a professor of molecular biophysics at the Indian Institute of Science, IISc, Bangalore. He currently teaches at the Institute of Bioinformatics and Applied Biotechnology, Bengaluru. His chief contributions are in the area of X-ray crystallography. He was awarded the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar award for outstanding contribution to physical sciences, which is the highest honour for a scientist in India, in the year 1992.
Jane Shelby Richardson is an American biophysicist best known for developing the Richardson diagram, or ribbon diagram, a method of representing the 3D structure of proteins. Ribbon diagrams have become a standard representation of protein structures that has facilitated further investigation of protein structure and function globally. With interests in astronomy, math, physics, botany, and philosophy, Richardson took an unconventional route to establishing a science career. Richardson is a professor in biochemistry at Duke University.
Dame Louise Napier Johnson,, was a British biochemist and protein crystallographer. She was David Phillips Professor of Molecular Biophysics at the University of Oxford from 1990 to 2007, and later an emeritus professor.
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Helen Miriam Berman is a Board of Governors Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Rutgers University and a former director of the RCSB Protein Data Bank. A structural biologist, her work includes structural analysis of protein-nucleic acid complexes, and the role of water in molecular interactions. She is also the founder and director of the Nucleic Acid Database, and led the Protein Structure Initiative Structural Genomics Knowledgebase.
Eleanor Joy Dodson FRS is an Australian-born biologist who specialises in the computational modelling of protein crystallography. She holds a chair in the Department of Chemistry at the University of York. She is the widow of the scientist Guy Dodson.
Mamannamana Vijayan was an Indian structural biologist.
Professor Jennifer Louise "Jenny" Martin is an Australian scientist and academic. She was the Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the University of Wollongong, in New South Wales from 2019-2022. She is a former Director of the Griffith Institute for Drug Discovery at Griffith University. and a former Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland. Martin is an Honorary Professor at the University of Queensland and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. Her research expertise encompasses structural biology, protein crystallography, protein interactions and their applications in drug design and discovery.
Jenny Pickworth Glusker is a British biochemist and crystallographer. Since 1956 she has worked at the Fox Chase Cancer Center, a National Cancer Research Institute in the United States. She was also an adjunct professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of Pennsylvania.
Krystle McLaughlin is a Caribbean-American structural biophysicist. She is an assistant professor of chemistry at Vassar College.
Microcrystal electron diffraction, or MicroED, is a CryoEM method that was developed by the Gonen laboratory in late 2013 at the Janelia Research Campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. MicroED is a form of electron crystallography where thin 3D crystals are used for structure determination by electron diffraction. Prior to this demonstration, macromolecular (protein) electron crystallography was only used on 2D crystals, for example.
Barbara Wharton Low was a biochemist, biophysicist, and a researcher involved in discovering the structure of penicillin and the characteristics of other antibiotics. Her early work at Oxford University with Dorothy Hodgkin used X-ray crystallography to confirm the molecular structure of penicillin, which at the time was the largest molecule whose structure has been determined using that method. Later graduate work saw her study with Linus Pauling and Edwin Cohn before becoming a professor in her own right. Low's laboratory would accomplish the discovery of the pi helix, investigate the structure of insulin, and conduct research into neurotoxins.
Władysław Minor also known as Wladek Minor is a Polish-American biophysicist, a specialist in structural biology and protein crystallography. He is a Harrison Distinguished Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics at the University of Virginia. Minor is a co-author of HKL2000/HKL3000 – crystallographic data processing and structure solution software used to process data and solve structures of macromolecules, as well as small molecules. He is a co-founder of HKL Research, a company that distributes the software. He is also a co-author of a public repository of diffraction images (proteindiffraction.org) for some of the protein structures available in the Protein Data Bank and other software tools for structural biology.
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