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Stephen
J. Benkovic was born in Orange, NJ. He received his B.S. degree
in Chemistry and A.B. degree in English Literature from Lehigh University,
and his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from Cornell University. After
a period as a postdoctoral research associate at the University
of California, Santa Barbara, he joined the Chemistry Department
at Penn State University in 1965 and became a Full Professor of
Chemistry in 1970, followed by recognitions as an Evan Pugh Professor
of Chemistry, and in 1988 the holder of the Eberly Chair in Chemistry.
His work has been recognized by awards and fellowships including:
Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, NIH Career Development Award, Guggenheim
Fellowship, the Pfizer Award in Enzyme Chemistry, the Gowland Hopkins
Award, the Repligen Award for Chemistry of Biological Processes,
the Alfred Bader Award, the Chemical Pioneer Award from the American
Institute of Chemists, and the Christian B. Afinsen Award. In addition,
he has been elected to memberships in the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of
Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and the American Philosophical
Society.
Benkovics
recent work has focused on the assembly and kinetic characteristics
of the protein machinery that is responsible for DNA replication
by T4 phage and yeast; the importance of dynamic coupling of proximal
and distal residues in the catalytic cycle of the dihydrofolate
reductase enzyme that serves as a paradigm for describing enzymic
catalysis in terms of a series of orchestrated protein conformations;
the direct intracellular observation by fluorescent imaging; of
the de novo purine biosynthesis, and their development of novel
cyclic peptides for modulating protein/protein interactions. |