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Louise Johnson

Dame Louise Johnson
Born
Louise Napier Johnson

(1940-09-26)26 September 1940
Died25 September 2012(2012-09-25) (aged 71)
EducationWimbledon High School for Girls
Alma materUniversity College London (BSc, PhD)
Known forDiscovering the structure of lysozyme and N-Acetylglucosamine[4]
Spouse
(m. 1968; died 1996)
Children2
AwardsDame Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Oxford
ThesisAn X-ray crystallographic study of N-acetylglucosamine and its relation to lysozyme. (1965)
Doctoral advisorDavid Chilton Phillips[1]
Other academic advisorsFrederic M. Richards[2]
Doctoral studentsDavid Barford
Jenny Martin[citation needed]
David J. Owen[3]
Other notable studentsJanos Hajdu

Dame Louise Napier Johnson, DBE FRS (26 September 1940 – 25 September 2012[5]), 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.[6] She was married to Pakistani nuclear physicist and a Nobel Prize-laureate Abdus Salam.

Education

Johnson attended Wimbledon High School for Girls from 1952 to 1959, where girls were encouraged to study science and to pursue useful careers. Her mother had read biochemistry and physiology at University College London in the 1930s and was supportive of Johnson's decision to pursue a scientific career. She went to University College London in 1959 to read Physics and coming from an all-girls school, she was surprised to find herself one of only four girls in a class of 40.

She took theoretical physics as her third-year option and graduated with a 2.1 degree. Whilst working at the Atomic Energy Authority, Harwell, on neutron diffraction, during one of her vacations, she met Uli Arndt, an instrument scientist, who worked at the Royal Institution, London. She was impressed by the work taking place there and in 1962 she moved to the Royal Institution to do a PhD in biophysics.[citation needed] Her graduate supervisor was David Chilton Phillips, whose team was working on the crystal structure of lysozyme.[citation needed] Her first task was to determine the structure of a sugar molecule, N-Acetylglucosamine, using x-ray diffraction, which she solved within a year. She then moved onto the study of the substrate binding to the protein lysozyme and was part of the team, that discovered the structure of the enzyme lysozyme; this was the third protein structure ever solved by x-ray crystallography, and the first enzyme. She was awarded her PhD in 1965.[1]

Career

After her PhD, she moved to the laboratory of Frederic M. Richards at Yale University for postdoctoral research in 1966. At Yale she worked as part of a team with Frederic M. Richards and Hal Wyckoff on the crystal structure of another enzyme, ribonuclease, which was solved shortly after she left: the fourth protein structure solved.[7]

After her post-doctoral year at Yale, she returned to the UK in 1967 and took up the post of Departmental Demonstrator in the Department of Zoology, University of Oxford. The Professor of Zoology, J.W.R. Pringle, saw zoology as extending from animal studies to molecular studies, and had been partly responsible for bringing David Phillips to Oxford as Professor of Molecular Biophysics. Johnson was able to combine teaching with independent research and continued her work on lysozyme and new crystal studies on other enzymes. In 1972 she received some crystals of glycogen phosphorylase and this was the beginning of a major chapter in her research career. She began a detailed x-ray crystallographic analysis of the protein, which was eight times larger than lysozyme and much larger than any of the other proteins whose structures had been solved at that time.

In 1973 she was appointed University Lecturer, a post which was associated with Somerville College, Oxford. She became an Additional Fellow of the college and the Janet Vaughan Lecturer. She was now able to expand her team of graduate students and post-doctoral researchers. The phosphorylase work developed and by 1978 the team had discovered its structure and were able to work on its biological control properties. Glycogen phosphorylase is found in muscle and is responsible for mobilising the energy store of glycogen to provide fuel to sustain muscle contraction. In resting muscle the enzyme is switched off to prevent wasteful degradation of the fuel but in response to nervous or hormonal signals the enzyme is switched on almost simultaneously to generate the energy supply. Her research was directed towards understanding the molecular basis of the biological properties of control and catalytic mechanism. Her team used the bright x-ray source generated at the Synchrotron Radiation Source at Daresbury, which provided data that could not be obtained with the home source.[7] She was David Phillips Professor in Molecular Biophysics, University of Oxford, in 1990–2007.

Johnson's lab at Oxford solved and studied many other protein structures, and she is a depositor on 100 PDB entries including many forms of glycogen phosphorylase[8] and of cell cycle CDK/cyclin complexes[9] As well as carrying out cutting-edge research, she nurtured numerous careers, training a generation of crystallographers in Oxford who themselves now train future leaders across the world.[10] Together with Tom Blundell, she wrote an influential textbook on protein crystallography.[11] She was Director of Life Sciences at Diamond Light Source, 2003–2008, and was a Fellow of Diamond Light Source, 2008–2012. Diamond Light Source is the UK's national synchrotron facility at Harwell, Oxfordshire.[12]

Honours

She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 2003.[citation needed] She was a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford and an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford.[13] She received a number of honorary degrees, including: Hon DSc University of St Andrews, 1992; Hon DSc University of Bath, 2004; Hon DSc Imperial College London, 2009; Hon DSc University of Cambridge, 2010. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society[14] (FRS) in 1990; an Associate Fellow of the Third World Academy of Science, 2000; a Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Sciences, 2011.[15][16]

Personal life

Louise Napier Johnson was born on 26 September 1940 at South Bank Nursing Home, Worcester, as the second of three daughters of George Edmund Johnson (1904–1992), a wool broker then serving in the Royal Air Force, and his wife, Elizabeth Minna, née King (1914–1992). The family was living at White Cottage, Rushwick, near Worcester, at the time.[17]

Johnson married the Pakistani theoretical physicist Abdus Salam in 1968.[5] He later shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1979 for his work on electroweak unification. They had two children: a son born in 1974 and a daughter born in 1982. Johnson's husband died in 1996. She died on 25 September 2012 in Cambridge, England, one day before her 72nd birthday.[18][5][19]

References

  1. ^ a b Johnson, Louise Napier (1965). An X-ray crystallographic study of N-acetylglucosamine and its relation to lysozyme. london.ac.uk (PhD thesis). University of London. OCLC 1006071943.
  2. ^ "Fred Richards on Academic Tree".
  3. ^ Owen, David Jonathan (1994). Molecular studies on phosphorylase kinase. solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk (DPhil thesis). University of Oxford. OCLC 55697925. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.240633.
  4. ^ Johnson, L. N.; Phillips, D. C. (1964). "Crystal Structure of N-Acetylglucosamine". Nature. 202 (4932): 588. Bibcode:1964Natur.202..588J. doi:10.1038/202588a0. PMID 14195059. S2CID 4277260.
  5. ^ a b c "ICTP – In Memoriam". Ictp.it. 26 September 1940. Archived from the original on 16 November 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  6. ^ Sansom, M. (2012). "Louise Johnson (1940–2012)". Nature. 490 (7421): 488. Bibcode:2012Natur.490..488S. doi:10.1038/490488a. PMID 23099399.
  7. ^ a b Louise N. Johnson, "Clever Women", unpublished autobiographical notes, deposited with the papers of L.N. Johnson, at the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.
  8. ^ Barford, D.; Johnson, L. N. (1989). "The allosteric transition of glycogen phosphorylase". Nature. 340 (6235): 609–616. Bibcode:1989Natur.340..609B. doi:10.1038/340609a0. PMID 2770867. S2CID 132865.
  9. ^ Honda, R.; Lowe, E. D.; Dubinina, E.; Skamnaki, V.; Cook, A.; Brown, N. R.; Johnson, L. N. (2005). "The structure of cyclin E1/CDK2: Implications for CDK2 activation and CDK2-independent roles". The EMBO Journal. 24 (3): 452–463. doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7600554. PMC 548659. PMID 15660127.
  10. ^ "Louise Johnson Remembered". Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  11. ^ Blundell, TL; Johnson, LN (1976), Protein Crystallography, Academic Press, ISBN 978-0121083502
  12. ^ Diamond Light Source.
  13. ^ University of Oxford (September 2009). "Professors Emeritus". University of Oxford Calendar 2009–2010. Oxford University Press. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-19-956692-1.
  14. ^ Barford, David; Blundell, Thomas L. (2022). "Dame Louise Napier Johnson. 26 September 1940—25 September 2012". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 72: 221–250. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2021.0038. S2CID 247191024.
  15. ^ Order of Service for Louise Johnson, 2012, deposited with the papers of L.N. Johnson at the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
  16. ^ Staff (8 October 2012). "Obituaries: Professor Dame Louise Johnson". London: The Telegraph. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  17. ^ Elspeth F. Garman, "Johnson, Dame Louise Napier (1940–2012)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2016) Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  18. ^ Lancet obituary Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  19. ^ Tom Blundell (10 October 2012). "Dame Louise Johnson obituary | guardian.co.uk". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
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