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Jennifer L. Martin

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Jenny Martin
Professor Jenny Martin is Director of the Eskitis Institute for Drug Discovery at Griffith University
NationalityAustralian
Alma materVictorian College of Pharmacy
(B Pharm, M Pharm)
Oxford University (PhD)
London Business School
Scientific career
InstitutionsVictorian College of Pharmacy
University of Oxford
Bond University
Rockefeller University
University of Queensland
Griffith University
Doctoral advisorPeter Goodford
Louise Johnson

Professor Jennifer L. (Jenny) Martin is the Director[1][2] of the Eskitis Drug Discovery Institute at Griffith University, and a former Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow, at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland. Her research expertise and interests lie in the areas of structural biology, protein crystallography, protein interactions and their applications in drug design and discovery.

Education

Martin completed a Bachelor of Pharmacy at the Victorian College of Pharmacy in Melbourne from 1979–1981, receiving the Gold Medal for the best student in the B Pharm course. After spending a year as a trainee pharmacist, she completed a Masters in Pharmacy, supervised by Professor Peter Andrews, on the application of computational chemistry to opioid analgesics, which piqued her interest in research and led to her first scientific publications.[3][4] She then left Australia to undertake a PhD at the University of Oxford supported by a Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 Science Research Scholarship and four other scholarships and bursaries. Under the guidance of Professors Peter Goodford and Louise Johnson, her PhD research used protein crystallography to design glycogen phosphorylase inhibitors as potential anti-diabetic compounds.[5][6] Martin recently paid tribute to the positive influence that Louise Johnson had on her career upon her death in 2012.[7] In 2015, Martin completed the London Business School 4-week Senior Executive Programme as part of a cohort of 50 industry, government, not-for-profit and academic leaders from around the world.

Scientific career

After completing her PhD she returned briefly to Australia to take up a post-doctoral position at Bond University in 1990. However, the unexpected closure of the School of Science and Technology resulted in her leaving Australia early in 1991 to take up a post-doctoral position with Professor John Kuriyan, a structural biologist, at Rockefeller University in New York to work on the disulfide bond forming family of proteins (DSBs) in Escherichia coli. She solved the structure of the DsbA protein which was published in 1993 in the high impact journal Nature.[8]

DsbA crystals growing in a drop of protein solution

In 1993 Martin received an ARC Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship which enabled her to return to Australia and establish the first protein crystallography lab in Queensland, which is now known as the UQ Remote Operation Crystallisation and X-ray Diffraction (UQ ROCX) Facility of which Martin is the Foundation Director.[9] She remained at the University of Queensland until 2015 supported by several other fellowships: an ARC Senior Research Fellowship in 1999, an NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship in 2007 and, in 2009, Martin was one of just 15 researchers, and only two women, to receive an inaugural ARC Australian Laureate Fellowship.[10][11] In 2016, Jenny was appointed Director of the Eskitis Drug Discovery Institute at Griffith University, which hosts unique drug discovery resources including Compounds Australia and NatureBank.

Crystal structure of DsbA - yellow spheres show the active site disulfide in the protein

Since returning to Australia and establishing her own research group, Martin has continued working on DSB proteins and is now developing inhibitors of these bacterial proteins as a potential means of combatting antibiotic resistance.[12][13] She also began working on other proteins including phenylethanolamine N-methyl transferase (PNMT), an enzyme that catalyses adrenalin synthesis. Martin published the structure of this enzyme[14] and later, as part of her ongoing research into different PNMT substrate-bound complexes, she became the first remote access user of the Australian Synchrotron.[15] Over the past 10 years, she has also contributed significantly to the structural biology of membrane fusion,[16][17][18] a fundamentally important process that underpins systems as diverse as neurotransmission and blood glucose control. She wrote an invited commentary for The Conversation in 2013 on this topic,[19] and was invited to present a keynote lecture on her membrane fusion research at the 23rd triennial International Union of Crystallography Congress held in Montreal in 2014.[20]

Honours and leadership roles

In addition to the research fellowships she has been awarded during her career, Martin has also received several honours in recognition of her professional contributions including:

  • 2005 Roche Medal, Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology[21][22]
  • 2005 Queensland Government Smart Women Smart State Award (Research Scientist Category)
  • 2006 Women in Biotech Outstanding Biotechnology Researcher Award
  • 2007 Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture, Oxford[23]
  • 2007 Honorary Life Membership, Questacon (National Science and Technology Centre), Canberra
  • 2010 Lady Masson Lecture, The University of Melbourne[24]
  • 2011 Women in Technology Outstanding Biotechnology Achievement[25]
  • 2015 Finalist, Newscorp QLD Pride of Australia Inspiration Category[26]
  • 2015 Finalist, NAB Women's Agenda, Mentor of the Year[27]
  • 2016, Finalist, Queensland Telstra Business Women of the Year, Public Sector and Academia[28]

Martin has also held a number of leadership roles on national and international committees. She is a former chair of the National Committee for Crystallography of the Australian Academy of Science (2008-2011), a past President of the Society for Crystallographers in Australia and New Zealand (2003-2005) and a current member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Australian Synchrotron (2002-2009), the incoming President of the Asian Crystallography Association and a member of the International Scientific Advisory Group of the EMBL-Australian Bioinformatics Resource.

Advocacy and science communication

In more recent years Martin has emerged as a strong advocate for equal opportunity and addressing gender imbalance in academia.[29] She published a letter in the prestigious journal Nature calling for scientific conference organisers to be more transparent with respect to their gender-balance policies and historical data.[30] This inspired Dr Kat Holt to develop a website, "Look Who's Talking",[31] that presents crowdsourced data on gender balance at scientific conferences held in Australia. Martin also writes a blog [32] which focuses on issues relating to women in academia, and she was a Foundation member of the steering committee for Science in Australia Gender Equity (SAGE)[33] that recently launched a pilot of the UK Athena SWAN charter to address the under-representation of women in science, particularly at senior positions in universities. As an opinion leader she has been invited to speak on gender equity worldwide, and across sectors. In 2017, she will be the Ellis Gillespie Lecturer for the Australia and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists Annual Scientific Meeting, and the presenter of the Wunderly oration at the Thoracic Society Australia and New Zealand and Society of Respiratory Science Annual Scientific Meeting.

Martin also contributes to science communication initiatives to help a wider audience understand her scientific fields of interest. She has participated in events such as BrisScience,[34] which runs public lectures on science and technology; SCOM BOMB,[35] a Google hangout operated by the Australian Science Communicators, Science Rewired and the Centre for the Public Awareness of Science as part of the No Funny Business science communication website;[36] and the 2014 UNESCO International Year of Crystallography, including a radio interview[37] and public lecture.[38] She also writes articles for The Conversation,[39] an independent, online source of news and views from the academic and research community.

Personal life

Martin grew up in a large family of 9 children in Dandenong, Victoria. She currently resides in Brisbane with her husband Michael.[40]

References

  1. ^ "Leading scientist to head Griffith's Eskitis Institute". Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  2. ^ "Prof Jenny Martin - Griffith University". www.griffith.edu.au. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  3. ^ Andrews PR, Craik DJ and Martin JL, Functional group contributions to drug-receptor interactions, J Med Chem (1984) 27:1648
  4. ^ Martin J and Andrews P, Conformation-activity relationships of opiate analgesics, J Comput Aided Mol Des (1987) 1:53
  5. ^ Martin JL, Johnson LN and Withers SG, Comparison of the binding of glucose and glucose 1-phosphate derivatives to T-state glycogen phosphorylase b, Biochemistry (1990) 29:10745
  6. ^ Martin JL, Veluraja K, Ross K, Johnson LN, Fleet GW, Ramsden NG, Bruce I, Orchard MG, Oikonomakos NG, Papageorgiou AC, Leonidas DD and Tsitoura HS, Glucose analogue inhibitors of glycogen phosphorylase: the design of potential drugs for diabetes, Biochemistry (1991) 30:10101
  7. ^ Obituary for Professor Dame Louise Johnson: a personal perspective from a former student
  8. ^ Martin JL, Bardwell JC and Kuriyan J, Crystal structure of the DsbA protein required for disulphide bond formation in vivo, Nature (1993) 363:464
  9. ^ UQ Remote Operation Crystallisation and X-ray Diffraction (UQ ROCX) Facility
  10. ^ UQ News: UQ awarded more than $5M in Australian Laureate Fellowships
  11. ^ Biographies of 2009 Australian Laureate Fellows
  12. ^ Adams, Luke A.; Sharma, Pooja; Mohanty, Biswaranjan; Ilyichova, Olga V.; Mulcair, Mark D.; Williams, Martin L.; Gleeson, Ellen C.; Totsika, Makrina; Doak, Bradley C. (9 February 2015). "Application of fragment-based screening to the design of inhibitors of Escherichia coli DsbA". Angewandte Chemie (International Ed. in English). 54 (7): 2179–2184. doi:10.1002/anie.201410341. ISSN 1521-3773. PMID 25556635.
  13. ^ Duprez, Wilko; Premkumar, Lakshmanane; Halili, Maria A.; Lindahl, Fredrik; Reid, Robert C.; Fairlie, David P.; Martin, Jennifer L. (22 January 2015). "Peptide inhibitors of the Escherichia coli DsbA oxidative machinery essential for bacterial virulence". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 58 (2): 577–587. doi:10.1021/jm500955s. ISSN 1520-4804. PMID 25470204.
  14. ^ Martin JL, Begun J, McLeish MJ, Caine JM and Grunewald GL, Getting the adrenaline going: crystal structure of the adrenaline-synthesizing enzyme PNMT, Structure (2001) 9:977
  15. ^ Lightspeed - Australian Synchrotron News: More than remotely interesting
  16. ^ Hu S-H, Latham CF, Gee CL, James DE and Martin JL, Structure of the Munc18c/Syntaxin4 N- peptide complex defines universal features of the N-peptide binding mode of SM proteins, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (2007) 104:8773
  17. ^ Hu S-H*, Christie MP*, Saez NJ, Latham CF, Jarrott R, Lua LHL, Collins BM and Martin JL, Possible roles for Munc18-1 domain 3a and Syntaxin1 N-peptide and C-anchor in SNARE complex formation, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (2011) 108:1040
  18. ^ Christie MP*, Whitten AE*#, King GJ, Hu S-H, Jarrott RJ, Chen K-E, Duff AP, Callow P, Collins BM, James DE, Martin JL# "Low-resolution solution structures of Munc18:Syntaxin complexes indicate an open binding mode driven by Syntaxin N-peptide" Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (2012) 109:9816
  19. ^ Bread, beer and botox: the science behind the 2013 Nobel Prize for medicine, The Conversation, 8 October 2013
  20. ^ IUCr 2014 Keynote Lecture - The mystery of membrane fusion: structural biology of Munc18 proteins; 10 August 2014; Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  21. ^ ASBMB website: The 2005 Roche Medal
  22. ^ IMB News: Top Award to IMB Researcher
  23. ^ 9th Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture: Professor Jenny Martin, The name's Bond.....Disulphide Bond, University Museum, Oxford, 6 March 2007
  24. ^ Lady Masson Lecture 2010 at the University of Melbourne
  25. ^ IMB News: Researchers shine at Women in Technology Awards
  26. ^ "Tireless science campaigner in line for medal". UQ News. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  27. ^ "Mentor recognised in national leadership awards - Institute for Molecular Bioscience - The University of Queensland, Australia". www.imb.uq.edu.au. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  28. ^ "Queensland women lending a hand to help others succeed - Telstra Business Women's Awards". Telstra Business Women’s Awards. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  29. ^ "Ending the Silent Brain Drain: Professor Jenny Martin on Supporting Women in Science". Science in Australia Gender Equity (SAGE). 3 February 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  30. ^ Martin JL, Sexism: Conferences should seek a balance, Nature (2014) 493:305
  31. ^ Look Who's Talking website: Gender balance in scientific conferences (Australia)
  32. ^ cubistcrystal: Jenny Martin's blog
  33. ^ Australian Academy of Science: SAGE Forum
  34. ^ BrisScience: UQ Research Week 2013 "How are new medicines discovered?"
  35. ^ SCOM BOMB – Jenny Martin, Crystallographer
  36. ^ No Funny Business science communication website
  37. ^ 612 ABC Brisbane: 2014 is International Year of Crystallography
  38. ^ University of Melbourne, Faculty of Science: International Year of Crystallography 2014
  39. ^ Jenny Martin - The Conversation
  40. ^ Royal Australian Chemical Chemical Institute - IYCr Lecture Series: Professor Jenny Martin - 27 Mar 2014