- Jane S. Richardson
Jane Shelby Richardson (born 1941 in
Teaneck, New Jersey ) is an American biochemist who developed theRichardson diagram , or ribbon diagram, method of representing proteins. As of 2008, she is a professor inbiochemistry at Duke University.cite web | url = http://www.chemheritage.org/women_chemistry/career/richardson.html | title = A Protein Artist's Studio | publisher = Women in Chemistry | accessdate=2008-05-31]Biography
While attending high school in 1958, she won third place in the
Westinghouse Science Talent Search , the most prestigiousscience fair in the United States, with calculations of the satelliteSputnik 's orbit from her own observations.cite journal|url=http://units.aps.org/units/dbp/newsletter/upload/DBP-August-2004-Newsletter.pdf| title = Ribbon Diagrams and Protein Taxonomy | author = Bihar, S. | journal = The Biological Physicist | publisher = Division of Biological Physics of theAmerican Physical Society | volume = 4 | number = 3 | date = August 2004 | format = pdf] She continued her education in science atSwarthmore College , enrolling with the intention of studying mathematics, astronomy and physics. Her bachelors degree, though, was ultimately in philosophy with a minor in physics, and she pursued graduate work in philosophy atHarvard University , receiving hermasters degree in 1966. After finding herself unsuited to teaching high school, she joined her husband, David Richardson, then completing hisPhD work atMIT , in studying the 3-dimensional structure of proteins. Her specialty was readingX-ray crystallography and she began drawing her eponymous diagrams as a method of interpreting the often baffling data produced by this technique. cite web | url = http://research.duke.edu/richardsons/ | title = Ribbon Diagrams | author = Basgall, Monte | date =January 13 ,2008 | publisher = Duke Research | accessdate=2008-05-31] Without having earned a Ph.D. or an M.D. she has been promoted to many prestigious positions in academia. In July of 1985 she was awarded a MacArthur "genius" award for her work in biochemistrycite web|url = http://www.macfound.org/site/c.lkLXJ8MQKrH/b.1142689/k.2AE6/Fellows_List__July_1985.htm | title = Fellows List - July 1985 | publisher = The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation | date = 2007 | accessdate = 2008-05-31] . She was elected to theInstitute of Medicine in 2006. Richardson is currently aJames B. Duke Professor of Biochemistry at Duke University. She and her husband maintain the Richardson Laboratory at Duke University.cientific work
Richardson's first forays into science were in the field of
astronomy . By observing the position of Sputnik, then the onlyartificial satellite , on two successive nights, she managed to calculate its predicted orbit. She submitted her results to the Westinghouse Science Talent Search, winning third place in 1958.cite web|url = http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=finding-order-jane-richardson&sc=rss | title = Finding Order: Jane Richardson | date =May 28 ,2008 | author = Vanderkam, Laura | publisher =Scientific American | accessdate = 2008-06-01]After earning her masters degree in philosophy, Richardson rejoined the scientific world in the mid 1960s, working as a technician in the same lab as her husband. Classes in
botany andevolution that she had taken while pursuing her degree shaped her thinking about the work she was doing in the chemistry lab. The breakthrough in her studies arose from the protein structure studies performed by herself, her husband and a team of scientists. During theircrystallographic studies, Jane Richardson had come to realize that a general classification scheme can be developed from the recurring structuralmotifs of the proteins. In 1977 she published her results in "Nature", in a paper entitled "β-sheet topology and the relatedness of proteins". [cite journal | title = β-sheet topology and the relatedness of proteins | author = Richardson, Jane S. | volume = 268 | doi = 10.1038/268495a0 | date =August 11 ,1977 | pages = 495–500 | journal = Nature]In the meantime, Jane and David Richardson had moved to
Duke University , founding the Richardson Lab in 1970. Richardson had developed theribbon diagram over the course of her taxonomic research. Her iconic images first appeared in the journal "Protein Chemistry" in 1981. They have since become a standard way of visualizing proteins, allowing scientists to probe more deeply in the the structure and function of these complex objects.Peter Agre , Nobel laureate and fellow Duke professor, said of the Richardsons' work: "Jane and David’s work allowed us to reveal the form of proteins, and from there it was easier to understand their function."Richardson's more recent work goes far beyond classification, stretching into the fields of synthetic biochemistry and
computational biology . The Richardson Laboratory now investigates the design and manufacture of novel proteins and the development of software for modeling proteins and their interactions with surrounding molecules.References
reflist
External links
* [http://kinemage.biochem.duke.edu/lab/Richardson/richardson.php Richardson Lab website]
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