*** Welcome to piglix ***

Nat Sternberg

Nat L. Sternberg
Born August 2, 1942
Brooklyn, NY, USA
Died September 26, 1995(1995-09-26) (aged 53)
West Chester, PA, USA
Alma mater Purdue University
Doctoral advisor Sewell Champe
Known for P1 phage, site-specific recombination

Nat L. Sternberg (August 2, 1942 – September 26, 1995) was an American molecular biologist and bacteriophage researcher, particularly known for his work on DNA recombination and the phage P1.

Born in 1942 in Brooklyn, New York, Sternberg gained a BSc at Brooklyn College, followed by a master's at Long Island University. In 1969, he received a PhD from Purdue University, Indiana, researching T-even phage head proteins under the supervision of Sewell Champe.

In 1970–72, Sternberg held a postdoctoral fellowship at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology of the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) in Paris, under the direction of François Gros, where he researched the head proteins of phage λ. He then returned to the US, taking up the position of staff fellow in the laboratory of Robert Weisberg at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, where he continued to study λ, in collaboration with Lynn W. Enquist and others.

In 1976, Sternberg joined the group being established by Michael Yarmolinsky in the Laboratory of Molecular Biology of the National Cancer Institute's Frederick Cancer Research Center at Fort Detrick, Frederick, Maryland, where he started to study the phage P1. From 1981 he directed his own group, continuing to research the P1 phage, as well as branching out to study DNA recombination in mammalian cells. In 1984, his group moved to the Central Research and Development Department of DuPont, in Wilmington, Delaware, and Sternberg was a senior research fellow at DuPont Merck at the time of his death.


...
Wikipedia

...