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John Derek Smith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Derek Smith FRS (1924–2003) was a British molecular biologist who participated in many of the major discoveries at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) in Cambridge.[1]

  • Sherman Fairchild Scholar 1974-75;
  • Head, Subdivision of Biochemistry, Cell Biology Division 1976-88
  • FRS 1976;

In 1955 he married Ruth Aney (marriage dissolved 1968); died Cambridge 22 November 2003. He had a long term relationship with Rosemary Myers, an artist, which continued until his death. He was one of the very few scientists who understood the importance of nucleic acids before 1953. According to Nobel Laureate Sidney Altman

"John Smith was a venerable nucleic acids biochemist. He had worked on the nucleic acids of viruses long before coming to the MRC-LMB and was an expert on identification and characterization of nucleotides, much of it done on unlabeled material, detected by observing chromatographs under UV light. He was a quiet person but very lively in conversations about science."[2]

His doctoral students include Gerard R. Wyatt.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The Independent (27 November 2003). "John Smith: Obituary". Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  2. ^ RNA Processing: A Postdoc in a Great Laboratory Genetics, Vol. 165, 1633-1639, December 2003 by Sidney Altman