Contact:

YCR P53 Research Unit
Department of Biology
University of York
YORK YO10 5DD, UK.

Tel (within UK):
(01904) 328620
Fax: (01904) 328622
 
Tel (outside UK):
+44-1904-328620
Fax: +44-1904-328622
  
E-mail: ajm24@york.ac.uk

 

Frontiers in cell biology and medicine conference
www.sueslack.co.uk

James E Rothman
 

James E Rothman, PhD

Wallace Professor of the Biomedical Sciences
Yale University

Professor James Rothman, the Wallace Professor of the Biomedical Sciences at Yale University, is one of the world's most distinguished biochemists and cell biologists. He is Chairman of the Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Cell Biology and is the Director and founder of the Biodesign Institute on Yale’s new West Campus.  Rothman graduated from Yale College (1971) where he studied physics.  He received his Ph.D. degree in biological chemistry from Harvard (1976) and was a student at Harvard Medical School from 1971 to 1973.  From 1976 to 1978, he completed a fellowship in the Department of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  From 1978 to 1988, he was a professor in the Department of Biochemistry at Stanford University.  Dr. Rothman was the E.R. Squibb Professor of Molecular Biology at Princeton University (1988-1991).  He founded and chaired the Department of Cellular Biochemistry and Biophysics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (1991-2004), where he held the Paul A. Marks Chair and served as Vice-Chairman of Sloan-Kettering.  Prior to coming to Yale in 2008, Dr. Rothman was the Wu Professor of Chemical Biology in the Department of Physiology and Cellular Biophysics, and Director of Columbia University’s Sulzberger Genome Center.

Dr Rothman has received numerous awards and honors in recognition of his work on vesicle trafficking and membrane fusion, including the King Faisal International Prize for Science (1996), the Gairdner Foundation International Award (1996), the Lounsbery Award of the National Academy of Sciences (1997), the Heineken Foundation Prize of the Netherlands Academy of Sciences (2000), the Louisa Gross Horwitz prize of Columbia University (2002), and the Lasker Basic Science Award (2002).  He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences (1993) and its Institute of Medicine (1995), and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1994).

 

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Last updated: 2nd July, 2010 - Site maintained by: Julie Wainwright

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