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Protein Society

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Protein Society
Formation1985 (1985)
TypeLearned society
PurposeTo advance state-of-the-art science through international forums that promote communication, cooperation, and collaboration among scientists involved in the study of proteins.
Membership~1,100 (2023)
President
Elizabeth Meiering
Websitewww.proteinsociety.org

The Protein Society is an international, not-for-profit, scholarly society with the mission to provide forums for the advancement of research into protein structure, function, design and applications.

History

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The Protein Society was founded in 1986, with the leadership of Ralph Bradshaw, Finn Wold, David Eisenberg, Ken Walsh, Hans Neurath, and other protein researchers from diverse fields.[1]

Ralph Bradshaw was the society's first president,[2] followed by David Eisenberg, Finn Wold, Mark Hermodson, Joseph Villafranca, Brian Matthews, Robert Sauer, Christopher Dobson, Wiliam DeGrado, C. Robert Matthews, Jeffrey Kelly, Arthur Palmer, Daniel Raleigh, Lynne Regan, James U. Bowie, Carol Post, Charles L. Brooks III, Amy E. Keating, Chuck R. Sanders, Elizabeth Meiering

Journal

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In 1987, the Society began publishing the trans-disciplinary academic journal Protein Science,[2] with Hans Neurath serving as editor-in-chief. The journal covers research on the structure, function, and biochemical significance of proteins, their role in molecular and cell biology, genetics, and evolution, and their regulation and mechanisms of action. As of 2024, the editor-in-chief is John Kuriyan.[3]

Symposium

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The society organizes an annual symposium which hosts hundreds of participants from all over the world, features research presentations by leaders from the diverse fields involved in protein science, a graduate student poster competition, networking opportunities, free undergraduate registration, educational workshops, and the annual presentation of the Protein Society's Awards.

Awards

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The Protein Society presents eight awards each year:

  • Carl Brändén Award
  • Christian B. Anfinsen Award
  • Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Award
  • Emil Thomas Kaiser Award
  • Hans Neurath Award
  • Stein & Moore Award
  • Protein Science Young Investigator Award
  • Marie Daly Award

References

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  1. ^ Hermodson, Mark (1 August 2006). "The Protein Society: Celebrating 20 years in 2006—The founding and early years". Protein Science. 15 (8): 1811–1814. doi:10.1002/pro.151811. ISSN 1469-896X. PMC 2242597. PMID 16877705.
  2. ^ a b "History". Protein Society. 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  3. ^ "Protein Science Editorial Board". Protein Science. Retrieved 8 November 2024.
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