MADISON - Thomas Record, a biophysical chemist at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, has been named one of six 2006 Society Fellows by
the Biophysical Society, a 7,000-member U.S. organization that
represents global biophysics research.
A
chaired professor of chemistry and biochemistry, Record hopes that the
new honor will help in continuing to attract talented students and
extramural funding for his research.
A UW-Madison
faculty member for 35 years, Record is a basic scientist whose
laboratory has long explored how cell proteins recognize and bind to
DNA sequences, a critical process for the expression of genetic
information. Record and his group have described, for instance, the
binding behavior of a protein known as RNA polymerase, which, like a
tiny molecular machine, recognizes where gene sequences begin on DNA
and effectively translates that information into a "cellular recipe"
for protein manufacture.
Before joining the UW-Madison
faculty in 1970, Record completed postdoctoral work at Stanford
University and received a doctoral degree in biophysical chemistry from
the University of California, San Diego. As an undergraduate, Record
studied chemistry at Yale University.