David Stuart (structural biologist)
David I. Stuart FRS, FMedSci (born 1953) is a British structural biologist, best known for his contributions to the X-ray crystallography of viruses, in particular for determining the structures of foot-and-mouth disease virus, bluetongue virus and the membrane-containing phages PRD1 (the first structure of an enveloped virus) and PM2. He is an MRC Research Professor, joint Head of the Structural Biology Division at the University of Oxford, Director of Instruct[1] and Life Sciences Director at Diamond Light Source.[2]
Education
Stuart was born in 1953 in Lancashire. He was educated initially in Helmshore, Lancashire, and then in North Devon, at Barnstaple Grammar School. He studied Biophysics at King's College London, graduating in 1974 after which he attended the University of Bristol and completed a PhD in the Biochemistry Department in 1979, working on the structure of pyruvate kinase in the laboratory of Hilary Muirhead.
Career
Stuart moved to Oxford in 1979 and worked with Louise Johnson on the structure of glycogen phosphorylase before moving in 1981 to work at the Institute of Biophysics in Beijing, China, with Liang Dong-Cai on insulin. Returning to Oxford in 1983 to work with Johnson he then in 1985 set up his own research group in the Laboratory of Molecular Biophysics, focused mainly on virus–receptor interactions and virus assembly. In 1999 Stuart led the establishment of the Division of Structural Biology, in the Nuffield Department of Medicine.
Research
Stuart has solved the atomic structures of complex biological molecules and viruses, including foot-and-mouth disease virus, bluetongue virus and the membrane-containing phages PRD1 (the first structure of an enveloped virus) and PM2. . His structure of foot-and-mouth virus has assisted in the development of improved vaccines via structural vaccinology. He has also investigated the structure of the HIV reverse transcriptase protein, facilitating targeted drug design. Stuart also develops methods in structural biology and researches protein structure and evolution.
Since 2008 Stuart has, as life science director, helped the development of the Diamond Light Source, the UK's synchrotron light source.
Honours and awards
Stuart has received a number of awards, accolades and honours for his work on viral structure, including:
- FEBS Anniversary Prize (1990)
- Fellow of the Royal Society (1996)[3]
- Descartes Prize (2002)
- Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (2006)[3]
- Gregori Aminoff Prize with Stephen Harrison by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (2006)[3]
- European Crystallographic Association Max Perutz Prize (2007)[4]
- Honorary Degree, University of Helsinki, Finland (2010)
- Honorary Degree, University of Leeds (2011)
- Honorary Degree, University of Bristol (2015)[5]
- Premio Città di Firenze for Molecular Sciences – Award from CERM (2016)
References
- ↑ https://www.structuralbiology.eu/update/lead-instruct-scientists
- ↑ https://www.strubi.ox.ac.uk/research/david-stuart
- 1 2 3 David Stuart, Royal Society, retrieved 14 November 2016
- ↑ http://ecanews.org/mwp/blog/third-eca-max-perutz-prize-to-prof-david-stuart
- ↑ ref: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/graduation/honorary-degrees/2015.html/stuart.html