William T. Wickner
Bill Wickner | |
---|---|
Born | William T. Wickner March 14, 1946 |
Education | Yale University Harvard University |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Dartmouth College University of California, Los Angeles Stanford University |
Academic advisors | Arthur Kornberg Eugene P. Kennedy |
Doctoral students | Pamela Silver |
Website | dartmouth |
William T. Wickner (born March 13, 1946), the James C. Chilcott '20 Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry at Dartmouth Medical School, is an authority on membrane fusion and inheritance, which is a fundamental problem in eukaryotic and bacterial cell biology.[1]
Education
Bill Wickner, brother of prion biologist Reed Wickner and Cornell graduate Nancy Wickner Kogan, is a 1967 graduate of Yale University (chemistry) and a 1973 M.D. graduate of Harvard Medical School. At Harvard, he worked with Eugene P. Kennedy.
Career and research
He conducted post-doctoral research with Arthur Kornberg at Stanford University, discovering the role of an RNA primer in the replication of DNA. He began his independent research career as a Mellon senior fellow at Stanford in 1974, where he initiated studies of asymmetric membrane assembly in bacteria and viral assembly.
Wickner then spent 17 years on the faculty of UCLA, during which time he earned honors including an American Cancer Society Faculty Research Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship and an NIH MERIT Award.
In 1993, he moved to Dartmouth Medical School, where he became chair of the Biochemistry Department.[citation needed]
Wickner has trained many successful scientists including Barbara Conradt, Elliott Crooke, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Daniel Klionsky, Roland Lill, Gail Mandel, Janet Shaw, Pamela Silver, Gunnar von Heijne and Lois Weisman.[citation needed]
Wickner's Lab currently[when?] explores yeast vacuole fusion as a model for membrane fusion.
Awards and honors
Wickner was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1996. Wickner is also a foreign associate of the European Molecular Biology Organization and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences