Department of Biological Chemistry, News and Announcements
Ray Trievel recipient of Etter Award
Professor Ray Trievel has been named the recipient of the 2010 Etter Early Career Award from the American Crystallographic Association. He will receive this prestigious award next summer when he delivers a lecture at the ACA annual meeting in Chicago. The Etter award recognizes outstanding achievement and exceptional potential in crystallographic research demonstrated by a scientist at an early stage of their independent career. The award was established in 2002 to honor the memory of Professor Margaret C. Etter (1943-1992), who was a major contributor to the field of organic solid-state chemistry.
Lands Lectureship Speaker Named
The William E.M. Lands Lectureship, sponsored by the Department of Biological Chemistry, is pleased to announce that it has invited Richard Wurtman, M.D. to give the 2009 lecture. Dr. Wurtman is the Cecil H. Green Distinguished Professor of Neuropharmacology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, at MIT. Dr. Wurtman's discourse, Administering Phosphatide Precursors Increases Synaptic membrane, Dendritic Spines, and probably, Brain Synapses, will be on Tuesday, December 1, 2009, 12:00 pm, North Lecture Hall, MS II.
Rowena Matthews elected to American Philosophical Society
Rowena Matthews, G. Robert Greenberg distinguished university professor emeritus has been elected to the American Philosophical Society, the oldest learned organization in the United States. The ASP was founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin to promote useful knowledge in the sciences and humanities. Today the Society has 987 members; Matthews is one of only 35 new members elected this year. APS
Promising new target emerges for autoimmune diseases
Professor Ruma Banerjee, with Sanjay Garg and Zhonghua Yan of BioChem, have published a new study with results that have implications for scientists looking for ways to enlist regulatory T cells to rein in misguided autoreactive T cells, and for other research areas as well. Regulatory T cells also influence the immune response in cancer, pregnancy, organ transplants and infection. The authors say they have uncovered a fundamentally new mechanism that holds in check aggressive immune cells that can attack the body’s own cells. Michigan Newsroom
Turtles all the way: reflections of Bernard W. Agranoff
Emeritus Professor Bernard W. Agranoff was published in JBC as part of its Reflections series. A year in the laboratory of Feodor Lynen, at the Max Planck Institute for Cell Chemistry in Munich, he recalls “participat[ing] in the exciting search to unravel the biosynthesis of cholesterol.” Later research into the possible phosphomonoesters of myo-inositol, and the possible physiological significance, leads to some rather interesting insights in brain inositol and lithium. Agranoff ends with some speculations regarding the possibility that terrestrial inositol preceded the existence of living organisms. Download the pdf.
A Love Affair with Vitamins

The Journal for Biological Chemistry has published Emerita Professor Rowena G. Matthews' A Love Affair with Vitamins in the July edition as part of its Reflections series. In it Matthews tells of her progress from helping her biologist father preparing beef heart mitochondria for his research, to Radcliff in the 50s, and later Ann Arbor for thesis research with Vincent Massey and postdoctoral work with Charles Williams, who with Jud Coon convinced a then cautious University to hire her on as a Assistant Professor. Matthews’ subsequent adventures in biology make for compelling reading. Download the pfd.
Advances in microscopy at Kellogg aid Thompson's research

Two state-of-the-art confocal microscopes recently delivered to the Kellogg Eye Center will allow BioChem's Debra A. Thompson to advance her study of the biological mechanisms of inherited retinal diseases. Thompson also received a Senior Scientific Investigator Award from Research to Prevent Blindness for her research project entitled, "Visual Cycle Defects in Inherited Retinal Degeneration." Kellogg
Social Hour at Bar Louie from 4:30-6:30pm Thursday
The Department of Biological Chemistry Social Hour will be held at Bar Louie Thursday evening from 4:30 to 6:00. Hope to see everyone for appetizers and socializing. Please pass the invitation to all members of your labs and students. Hope to see everyone there for conversations and a bite to eat and if its nice out we can enjoy the weather on their outdoor patio!
The Work of William E. M. Lands

William E. M. Lands, who for 25 years was Professor of Biological Chemistry at the University of Michigan before becoming Senior Scientific Advisor at National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, is being celebrated for his life-long work in an article in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The Selective Placement of Acyl Chains: the Work of W.E.M. Lands
Social Hour at Bar Louie this Thursday, May 7th
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Hope to see everyone for appetizers, socializing, and celebrating the End of Term, or Spring and All, on this Thursday with Social Hour at Bar Louie (Liberty & Thompson Sts.) from 4:30-6:30pm. Bring everyone there for conversations and a bite to eat, and if its nice out we can enjoy the weather on their outdoor patio! Please pass the invitation to all members of your labs and students.