Simon Fraser University, Stanford University (PhD)
Awards
Avanti Lipids Award, ASBMB (2007), Julius Axelrod Award in Pharmacology, ASPET (2019), Biophysics of Health and Disease Biophysical Society (2020), Marie Maynard Daly Award, Protein Society (2024), Doctor of Science, honoris causa, Simon Fraser University (2024)
Following her PhD defense, Newton took up a postdoctoral research position at University of California, Berkeley in the laboratory of Daniel E. Koshland Jr. between 1986 and 1988, and subsequently began her own independent research laboratory in 1988, as assistant professor in Chemistry at Indiana University, subsequently receiving tenure as associate professor in 1994. She moved to University of California, San Diego in 1995, first as associate professor in pharmacology and then Professor, from 2001 to 2017. Between 2002 and 2006, she was vice-chair, then chair, of the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program before becoming the Director of the Molecular Pharmacology Track in the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program at the University of California San Diego. She was conferred with the title of Distinguished Professor of Pharmacology in 2017.
As of 2020, she is president-elect for the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, having served, since 2016, as ASBMB representative to the IUBMB general assembly, and, since 2015, as a Member of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Executive Committee for Congresses and Conferences.[8] Newton has supervised, and graduated, more 25 PhD postgraduate students and trained 23 Postdoctoral Fellows.[9]
Research
Newton has been a major driver in the PKC research field since the 1980s, working originally with Daniel E. Koshland Jr.[10][11] She helped define the multiple different mechanisms of PKC regulation by phosphorylation and its interaction with specific membrane phospholipids, such as phosphatidylserine[12][13][14][15] She has also made important discoveries in the protein phosphatase field, discovering and naming PHLPP (PH domain and Leucine rich repeat Protein Phosphatases), which regulate intracellular signaling through dephosphorylation of AKT.[16][17][18]
As of 2020, Newton has published over 190 peer-reviewed research articles that have been cited more than 25,000 times,[19] been awarded 1 patent [20] and co-edited two books on protein biochemistry and PKC.[21][22] Her work straddles basic research and has illuminated understanding of PKC in Alzheimer's disease[23][24]
and as a tumor suppressor in human cancers[25]
Editorials, research honours, scientific service and outreach
^Orr JW, Newton AC (1992). "Interaction of protein kinase C with phosphatidylserine. 1. Cooperativity in lipid binding". Biochemistry. 31 (19): 4661–4667. doi:10.1021/bi00134a018. PMID1581316.
^Orr JW, Newton AC (1992). "Interaction of protein kinase C with phosphatidylserine. 2. Specificity and regulation". Biochemistry. 31 (19): 4667–4673. doi:10.1021/bi00134a019. PMID1581317.
^Violin JD, Newton AC, Tsien RJ, Zhang J (2004), Chimeric phosphorylation indicator: US Patent No. 8,669,074
^Malacinski GM, Frielder D (1993). "Chapter 4: Essentials of Molecular Biology: The physical structure of protein molecules". Jones & Bartlett Publishers,Boston: 335. ISBN978-0-8672-0137-6.
^Newton AC (2003). "Methods in Molecular Biology 233: Protein Kinase C Protocols". Humana Press: 584. ISBN978-1-59259-397-2.