Robert Harold Wasserman (11 February 1926, Schenectady, New York – 23 May 2018, Ithaca, New York) was a professor of veterinary medicine and a research scientist, known as the principal investigator leading the scientists credited with the discovery of calcium-binding proteins.[1][2]
Biography
After graduating from high school in Schenectady, Wasserman matriculated in June 1943 at Union College, where he studied for three months before joining the Army Specialized Training Program and then the U. S. Army for basic training. In October 1944 he was sent overseas, where in December 1944 his division participated in operations of the Battle of the Bulge. After military service in WWII, he spent a year working on a farm in upstate New York and then matriculated at Cornell University.[1] There he graduated with a bachelor's degree in microbiology in 1949. After a year at Michigan State University, where he graduated in August 1950 with a master's degree in microbiology,[1][3] Wasserman returned to Cornell University. There he graduated in 1953 with a Ph.D. in nutritional microbiology.[1]
From 1953 to 1957, Wasserman was employed at the University of Tennessee's Atomic Energy Commission facility, where he worked on the radiation biology program with Dr. Cyril L. Comar (1914–1979), the program's director. In spring 1958, Wasserman returned to Cornell University as an associate professor in the New York State College of Veterinary Medicine's newly created Laboratory of Radiation Biology. Comar, who had moved to Cornell, in 1957 was the Laboratory's director. Wasserman was promoted in 1963 to full professor and eventually retired from Cornell as professor emeritus.[1]
In the 1990s, his laboratory made pioneering studies using ion microscopic imaging of calcium. He suggested "the presence of a vitamin D induced calcium channel in the intestine (later identified as the vitamin D regulated epithelial calcium channel, TRPV6)."[1]
Robert Wasserman married Marilyn Joyce Mintz in 1950 in Ithaca.[1] He was predeceased by his wife after 63 years of marriage. Upon his death he was survived by three daughters and four grandchildren.[5]
Awards and honors
1964 — Guggenheim Fellowship[6] (academic year 1964-1965 spent studying under Hans H. Ussing[1])
Krook, L.; Wasserman, R. H.; Shively, J. N.; Tashjian Jr, A. H.; Brokken, T. D.; Morton, J. F. (1975). "Hypercalcemia and calcinosis in Florida horses: implication of the shrub, Cestrum diurnum, as the causative agent". The Cornell Veterinarian. 65 (1): 26–56. PMID1112096.
Wasserman, R.; Henion, J.; Haussler, M.; McCain, T. (1976). "Calcinogenic factor in Solanum malacoxylon: evidence that it is 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-glycoside". Science. 194 (4267): 853–855. doi:10.1126/science.982048. ISSN0036-8075. PMID982048.