He held various positions at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry, Munich from 1973 to 1979, and in Uppsala from 1979.[2] Jones was a research professor employed by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council 1987–1994, and has been Professor of Structural Biology at the Department of Molecular Biology, Uppsala, from 1994.[1] He is also a Fellow of the Royal Society (elected in 1992) and a Foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (elected in 2000).[3][4] He is a recipient of the Gregori Aminoff Prize (2003), "for his pioneering development of methods to interpret electron density maps and to build models of biological macromolecules with the aid of computer graphics" and the Lindo Patterson Award, 2005, from the American Crystallographic Association.[3][5]
Jones is most noted for development of widely used programs for fitting models into crystallographic electron density maps, first Frodo,[6] then its further developed version O (molecular graphics),[7][8] and for involvement in structure validation.[7][9] He has solved a very large number of protein crystal structures and is listed as a depositor on 126 structures at the Protein Data Bank, especially emphasizing enzymes and viruses.[10][11][12][13] Web of Science credits him with over 29,000 citations,[14] and Google Scholar with over 14,000 citations (since 1990) and an h-index of 58, including over 11,000 citations for O and 1700 for Frodo.[6][7] He is currently a professor at Uppsala University in Sweden.[15]
^"T. Alwyn Jones". Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
^"T Alwyn Jones" (in Swedish). Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
^ abJones TA (1978). "A Graphics Model Building and Refinement System for Macromolecules". Journal of Applied Crystallography. 11: 268–272. doi:10.1107/S0021889878013308.
^ abcJones TA, Zou J-Y, Cowan SW, Kjeldgaard M (1991). "Improved methods for the building of protein models in electron density maps and the location of errors in these models". Acta Crystallographica. A47: 110–119. doi:10.1107/s0108767390010224.
^Jones TA, Liljas L (1984). "Structure of satellite tobacco necrosis virus after crystallographic refinement at 2.5 Å resolution". Journal of Molecular Biology. 177: 735–767. doi:10.1016/0022-2836(84)90047-0.
^Jansson AM, Jakobsson E, Johansson P, Lantez V, Coutard B, de Lamballerie X, Unge T, Jones TA (2009). "Structure of the methyltransferase domain from the Modoc virus, a flavivirus with no known vector". Acta Crystallographica. D65: 796–803. doi:10.1107/s0907444909017260.
^Thompson, A. J.; Heu, T; Shaghasi, T; Benyamino, R; Jones, A; Friis, E. P.; Wilson, K. S.; Davies, G. J. (2012). "Structure of the catalytic core module of the Chaetomium thermophilum family GH6 cellobiohydrolase Cel6A". Acta Crystallographica. D68 (8): 875–882. doi:10.1107/S0907444912016496.