- Julius Adler (biochemist)
Julius Adler
Ph.D. is anEmeritus Professor ofbiochemistry andgenetics at theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison .Early life
Adler was born in
Edelfingen, Germany in 1930. He came to the United States in 1938 at the age of 8 and became a naturalized citizen in 1943. His family settled inGrand Forks, North Dakota where their relatives were among the first Europeans to arrive in 1880. Since he was child, Adler had been fascinated by how organisms sense and respond to the environment.Education
Adler attended
Harvard University and received his A.B. in Biochemical Sciences in 1952. He then studied withHenry A. Lardy at theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison and earned anM.S. inBiochemistry in 1954 and aPh.D. inBiochemistry in 1957.After graduating, Adler did postdoctoral fellowships with
Arthur Kornberg in the Department of Microbiology atWashington University School of Medicine (1957-59) andDale Kaiser in the Department ofBiochemistry atStanford University School of Medicine (1959-60).Adler returned to the
University of Wisconsin-Madison to join the faculty of the Departments ofBiochemistry andGenetics in theUniversity of Wisconsin as an Assistant Professor in 1960. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1963 and becameProfessor in 1966. He has been in Madison since then.He became
Edwin Bret Hart Professor in 1972 and wasSteenbock Professor of Microbiological Sciences from 1982 to 1992. In 1997, He became anEmeritus Professor in the Departments ofBiochemistry andGenetics and remains in that capacity today.Contribution to Understanding Bacterial Chemotaxis
His work was inspired by a butterfly he saw in the woods when he was a child. This interest in butterflies expanded to include other organisms. It evolved into a curiosity about the behavior of organisms. He thought the behaviors of the
monarch butterfly laying eggs on milkweeds and the caterpillars staying on the milkweed until maturity can be explained by volatile chemicals from the milkweed.To study how organisms sense and respond to the environment, Adler decided to study the behavior of bacteria and then ultimately broaden out to the behavior of all organisms. In 1880,
Wilhelm Pfeffer , a famous German botanist, had used motile bacteria to study attraction and repulsion by various plant and animal extracts and chemicals. Adler built on this work. Using the system in "Escherichia coli ", Adler showed that bacteria sensed attractants and repellants with sensory proteins he termedchemoreceptors .These findings led to the discovery of the methylation of a protein in the envelope of "
E. coli " that is involved inchemotaxis . This protein is methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) and it acquires methyl groups frommethionine . Adler also identified the methylated residue of MCP.Adler eventually discovered that "
E. coli " contain several MCPs which play important roles in chemotaxis sensory transduction system. Strains of bacteria without this protein, or lacking the ability to methylate and demethylate them were unable to respond to stimuli. An increase in concentration of attractants led to an increase in methylation level of MCP; similarly, a decrease in attractants or increase in repellents led to a decrease in methylation level.By 1980s, it was determined that bacterial chemotaxis resulted from the regulation of flagellar rotation by chemoreceptors. Bacteria swam more smoothly due to a counterclockwise rotation of their flagella in the presence of increasing attractant. In a decreasing attractant gradient, there is an increase in bacterial tumbling, produced by a clockwise flagellar rotation. Adler isolated bacterial envelopes and found that he could restore counterclockwise flagellar rotation by adding artificial electron donors and an energy source. This suggested that the driving force behind counterclockwise flagellar rotation was the proton electrochemical potential.
Current Work
Adler is currently doing research on sensory reception and decision making in "
Drosophila " fruitflies. Flies are presented with attractant and/or repellent, and mutants that are neither attracted nor repelled are isolated. Defects in the mutants will be studied in hope of revealing the mechanisms involved.Awards and Honors
Adler has received many awards and honors for his work on bacterial chemotaxis:
*
Pasteur Award Medal of the Illinois Society for Microbiology, 1977
*Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology, National Academy of Sciences, 1980
*Otto-Warburg Medal of the German Society for Biological Chemistry,Berlin , 1986
*R. H. Wright Award in Olfactory Research, Simon Fraser University,Canada , 1988.
*Hilldale Award,University of Wisconsin-Madison , 1988
*Abbott-American Society for Microbiology Lifetime Achievement Award, 1995
*William C. Rose Award, American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1996.
*Elected toAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences , 1976
*Elected to National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A., 1978
*Elected toAmerican Philosophical Society , 1989.
*Elected Fellow of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science , 1991.
*Elected Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Microbiology , 1994.
*Elected Fellow of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters, 1996.References
# [http://www.biochem.wisc.edu/faculty/adler/default.aspx His academic home page]
# Many Face, Many Microbes: Personal Reflections in Microbiology
# (2006) JBC Centennial: Julius Adler’s Contributions to Understanding Bacterial Chemotaxis. "The Journal of Biological Chemistry." Vol 281, No. 41, Issue of October 13 p. e33
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