Frances Separovic
Professor Frances Separovic | |
---|---|
Known for | Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. Membrane biophysics. |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biophysical chemistry |
Institutions | School of Chemistry University of Melbourne Australia |
Frances Separovic (b. 1953-4)[1] is a biophysical chemist. She is a Professor of Chemistry and former Head of the School of Chemistry at the University of Melbourne, where she teaches physical chemistry and graduate students in her field.[2]
She is credited with developing a technique which utilises nuclear magnetic resonance spectrosopy (NMR) to study peptides in aligned lipid bilayers; this process is now used globally, and has applications in the study of the structure of membrane proteins and their effects on the membrane.[3]
Her current research concerns 'the structure and interactions of amyloid peptides from Alzheimer's disease, pore-forming toxins and antibiotic peptides in model biological membranes'.[4]
Early life
Separovic was born in Croatia, and emigrated to Australia with her family in 1957. They settled in Broken Hill, western New South Wales. Separovic excelled in school, and on completion she was awarded both a Commonwealth and teacher's scholarship; she began tertiary studies at the University of Sydney, but soon left to work at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). In addition to work and study, Separovic was a mother by 20.[5]
Early career and academic achievements
Separovic's career in science began as a Technical Assistant at a CSIRO microbiology lab (1972–78)[6] 'counting colonies' and 'doing the washing up'.[7] Adept at these basic tasks, she habitually finished her work early and went in search of more to do. Her capacity with mathematics recommended her to a section of the department involved in modelling lipid membranes, and trying to discover why they leak.[7] This was the project upon which Separovic first encountered an NMR machine – at the time (the early 70s)[6] a new invention – which now plays such a major role in her research. It was here, too, that she made her first contribution to a scientific paper: using her aptitude for mathematics to determine via 'simple geometry' the smallest possible radius of a vesicle which it is possible to make (10-nanometers), solving a contemporaneous argument within the scientific community.[7]
In 1978 Separovic completed a Technical Certificate in Biology at Sydney Technical College,[6] and continued to work at the CSIRO as a Technical Officer while studying part-time on a Bachelor of Arts at Macquarie University, with majors in Mathematics and Physics.[5] She completed her undergraduate degree in 1984, at which time she became an Experimental Scientist at CSIRO; in 1986 she finished an Honours qualification in Physics (also at Macquarie University). Between 1986 and 1992,[6] in addition to being a single parent and working full-time at the CSIRO, she completed a PhD (part-time) in Physics at the University of New South Wales.[7] Following a post-doctoral fellowship at the National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, USA), Frances returned briefly to CSIRO before moving to the University of Melbourne as an Associate Professor & Reader in 1996.
Later career and public recognition
In 2005, Separovic became the first woman to be appointed to a professorship in chemistry in Victoria.[7] She is currently Professor of Chemistry and Group Leader at the Bio21 Institute and was Head of School at the University of Melbourne (2010–2015), President of the Australian and New Zealand Magnetic Society for Resonance (ANZMAG), President of the Australian Society for Biophysics,[2] Secretary of Biophysical Society (USA) and serves on the board of the Centre for Chemistry and Biotechnology at Deakin University.[6]
She is on the editorial board of Biochimica et Biophysica Acta and an editor of European Biophysics Journal and a member of the editorial advisory board of Accounts of Chemical Research and Chemical Reviews. Separovic is also a member of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute (RACI).
In 2012 Frances Separovic was made Fellow of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance (ISMAR), the Biophysical Society (USA) and the Australian Academy of Science – the first woman to be elected to the AAS in the field of chemistry. At the time, Separovic had published over 130 papers and successfully organized more than 25 conferences.[7]
References
- ^ "Interview in 'Croatian Herald' (29 Jan 2007)" (PDF). separovic.chemistry.unimelb.edu.au. The University of Melbourne.
- ^ a b "Professor Frances Separovic, FAA". separovic.chemistry.unimelb.edu.au. The University of Melbourne.
- ^ "Fellows elected in 2012". sciencearchive.org.au. The Australian Academy of Science.
- ^ "Professor Frances Separovic". chemistry.unimelb.edu.au. The University of Melbourne.
- ^ a b "Frances Separovic 'Bluestocking' sees red about the media treatment of women" (PDF). www.nteu.org.au. NTEU ADVOCAT, vol. 19, no. 3, November 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "Frances Separovic CV" (PDF). separovic.chemistry.unimelb.edu.au. The University of Melbourne.
- ^ a b c d e f "The chemistry of curiosity" (PDF). www.voice.unimelb.edu.au. VOICE The University of Melbourne.