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ASPB
Members Kay, Carrington, and Schmitt Elected to National Academy of Sciences

Steve
Kay
Photo courtesy of UCSD. |
ASPB members Steve
Kay, James Carrington, and Johanna Schmitt have been elected to the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS). Their elections were announced on April 29,
2008, at the Academys 145th annual meeting. Kay, Carrington, and
Schmitt were elected individually for their distinguished work and original
research in plant science.
ASPBs three
plant biologists were among the 72 members and 18 foreign associates elected
this year. Election to NAS is one of the highest honors a scientist or
engineer can receive. Potential NAS members can be nominated only by an
existing Academy member. Membership is achieved through a formal and confidential
election process; no applications are accepted.
Steve Kay
Steve Kay is currently
dean of the Division of Biological Sciences and holds the Richard C. Atkinson
Chair in the Biological Sciences at the University of California, San
Diego. He is also professor of cell and developmental biology. Previously
he was chair of the Department of Biochemistry, professor of cell biology,
and director of the Institute for Childhood and Neglected Diseases at
the Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in La Jolla, Calif., where he was
a faculty member from 1996 to 2007. His academic research concerns the
molecular genetic basis of circadian rhythms in plants, animals, and humans.
He was also recently
director of Discovery Research at the Genomics Institute of the Novartis
Research Foundation (GNF), where he built a large department in which
human genome science is applied to biomedical research and drug discovery.
Kay is the founder and former chief technology officer and senior vice
president of Phenomix Corporation, a drug discovery and development company
based in San Diego.
Kay received his bachelors
degree in biochemistry from the University of Bristol, England, in 1981,
and he received a PhD in biochemistry from the same institute in 1985.
He was a postdoctoral fellow from 1985 to 1989 and then assistant professor
from 1989 to 1992 at the Rockefeller University, where he established
a research program in the circadian rhythms of the model plant Arabidopsis
and the fruit fly Drosophila.
In 1992, Kay joined
the University of Virginia, where he developed real-time luciferase reporter
technology for measuring subcellular events in live plants and animals.
This technology was used to identify several key clock genes in both systems
using genetic screens. He joined TSRI in 1996, and his work there has
further expanded our knowledge of the molecular components and mechanisms
of the action of circadian clocks, ranging from the mechanism of day length
sensing in plants to behavioral control in mammals.
Kay stated, Plant
biology is gaining increased importance in the world today with our growing
need to develop novel approaches to solving the worlds food crisis
and to find ways to beat the high prices at the pump and meet our future
energy needs through the development of new biofuels.
Kay has received a
Keck Foundation Faculty Award and the Honma Prize for Life Sciences, along
with several other academic awards. His work was cited in 1997, 1998,
and 2002 as Science magazines Breakthroughs of the
Year.

James Carrington
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James Carrington
James Carrington is
professor, Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, and director, Center
for Genome Research and Biocomputing, Oregon State University, Corvallis.
A California native,
Carrington received a BS in plant sciences from the University of California,
Riverside (1982), and a PhD with T. Jack Morris at the University of California,
Berkeley (1986). He was an NIH postdoctoral fellow (19861988) with
W. G. Dougherty at North Carolina State University and Oregon State University
(OSU) before taking his first faculty position at Texas A&M University.
He moved to Washington
State University in 1997 and then to Oregon State University in 2001.
At OSU, Carrington serves as director of the Center for Genome Research
and Biocomputing. He was an NSF Presidential Young Investigator (19911996),
was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, and was corecipient (with W. G. Dougherty) of the Ruth Allen
Award from the American Phytopathological Society in 2000. Among many
editorial and service positions, he has been a coeditor of The Plant
Cell and a member of the Sainsbury Laboratory Council in England.
Carringtons
early work focused on structure of RNA virus genomes and viral replication
and movement. He eventually moved into virushost interactions using
the Arabidopsis model. His recent work focuses on the functions, mechanisms,
and evolution of small RNA-directed gene-silencing systems in plants.
Carrington had this
to say about his experience: When the phone rings at 6:00 a.m. on
the day you know NAS will announce new members, its a real jolt.
I was fortunate to speak first with Bob Goldberg, who informed me of the
election results, and then many others as the phone was passed around.
My wife, Teri, and I went quickly to the Internet and e-mail to determine
who else was elected, and that was followed immediately by a giddy phone
conversation with my good friend, Steve Kay. I am very proud to be elected
in the same class as Steve and Marty Yanofsky.
I sincerely
appreciate the honor. But its also a humbling experience, as all
of the contributions from my lab are the results of hardworking students,
postdocs, research assistants, and other scientists. Ive had some
really good people in my group over the years. And weve collaborated
with some very special scientists, like Detlef Weigel, with whom I am
currently on sabbatical.
Several people
were very influential in my career. I would note, in particular, Brian
Staskawicz, who was hired as an assistant professor while I was a graduate
student at the University of California, Berkeley. Although it took many
years to sink in, he taught me the value of focusing on a problem and
making an impact. I have also been influenced heavily by David Baulcombe,
who helped me learn that the route forward sometimes requires one to evolve.

Johanna Schmitt
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Johanna Schmitt
Johanna Schmitt is
Stephen T. Olney Professor of Natural History in the Department of Ecology
and Evolutionary Biology at Brown University in Providence, R.I. Schmitts
lab is interested in the adaptive evolution of developmental, physiological,
and life history traits in natural plant populations. The lab also measures
natural selection on these traits and the loci underlying them by experimentally
manipulating environments, phenotypes, and genotypes in the field.
Recently, Schmitt
and her team have explored the evolution of adaptive plasticity using
phytochrome-mediated shade avoidance responses to crowding
and vegetation shade as a model system. Another major research objective
is to elucidate the genetic and ecological mechanisms of adaptation to
seasonal and geographic variations in climate. The lab also pursues interests
in conservation biology of rare plants, particularly in threatened New
England habitats.
Schmitt, who joined
the Brown faculty in 1982, studies how plants change over time in response
to their environment. Schmitt and her research group use the model plant
Arabidopsis thalianaa member of the mustard familyto
study how genetic variation in sensitivity to environmental cues such
as day length and temperature affects reproductive success in different
regions and climates. In Europe, for example, Arabidopsis can be found
from Finland to Spain. How does one species thrive in so many places?
This is the question
Schmitt is pursuing with an international team of experts in plant, molecular,
and evolutionary biology, as well as ecologists, geneticists, and computer
scientists. Answers will help scientists better understand how ongoing
climate change will affect crops and wild plants and will point out ways
to conserve species.
Schmitt earned her
PhD in biology from Stanford University and conducted research at Duke
University before coming to Brown. She is president of the Society for
the Study of Evolution and is past president of the American Society of
Naturalists. She is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science. In 2007, she received a Humboldt Research Award.
Regarding her NAS
election, Schmitt recounted, I was out of my office, so I got the
news in a voicemail from Rita Colwell. I feel thrilled and honored to
join such distinguished companyincluding several recent ASPB presidents!
But the honor really belongs to the wonderful students, postdocs, and
research assistants who have worked in my lab over the yearsit has
been my privilege to work with them.
I was inspired
to become a plant biologist by my undergraduate mentor at Swarthmore,
Jim Hickman, and I would never have made it through graduate school without
the support and encouragement of my graduate advisor, Ward Watt. Janis
Antonovics was an extraordinary postdoctoral adviser whose influence remains
with me every time I design an experiment.
My fantastic
colleagues at Brown are always teaching me new things, from molecular
evolution to climate change. I also have learned an incredible amount
from my collaborators over the years, especially Renata Wulff, Harry Smith,
Michael Purugganan, Trudy Mackay, Steve Welch, and all of my colleagues
involved in our current NSF Frontiers in Integrative Biological Research
field experiments in Europe. Im also very grateful to George Coupland
and Maarten Koornneef, and their wonderful departments at the Max Planck
Institute for Plant Breeding, for everything I learned during my recent
sabbatical there.
The National Academy
of Sciences was established by Abraham Lincoln in 1863 as a scientific
consulting resource for the federal government. It is a private organization
of scientists and engineers interested in advancing science and developing
its applications for the greater good. Members and associates specialize
in one of 31 areas of science or engineering. NAS now has 2,041 active
members and 397 foreign associates. Additional information is available
at http://www.NASONLINE.org.
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