American botanist and microbiologist
William Martin (born February 16, 1957, in Bethesda, Maryland ) is an American botanist and microbiologist, currently Head of the Institut für Molekulare Evolution, Heinrich Heine Universität , Düsseldorf .
Born in Bethesda, Maryland , Martin was educated at Richland College , Dallas, Texas, and Texas A&M University . After working as a carpenter in Dallas, Martin moved to Hannover , Germany, and obtained his university Diploma from Technische Universität Hannover in 1985. Martin's PhD is from Max-Planck-Institut für Züchtungsforschung, Cologne , where he did postdoctoral research , followed by further postdoctoral work at Institut für Genetik, Technische Universität Braunschweig , where he obtained his Habilitation in 1992.[citation needed ] In 1999, Martin became full (C4) professor at Universität Düsseldorf.[citation needed ]
Martin is a distinguished and sometimes controversial[citation needed ] contributor to the field of molecular evolution and the origin of life . He is known particularly for his work on the evolution of the Calvin cycle and plastids including chloroplasts , and, more generally, for contributions to understanding the origin and evolution of eukaryotic cells . Martin is co-author, with Miklos Mueller of Rockefeller University , of the 1998 paper The Hydrogen hypothesis for the first eukaryote .[citation needed ] A wealth of subsequent research papers include contributions, independently and with Michael J. Russell of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory , to understanding the geochemical origins of cells and their biochemical pathways. Martin's work is well cited (nearly 30,000 times) and he has an h-index of 95.[ 1]
Awards
Honours
2000-2007 Foreign Associate, CIAR Programme in Evolutionary Biology
2001- Faculty 1000 Member for Plant Genomes and Evolution
2006- Elected Fellow, American Academy for Microbiology
2006-2009 Julius von Haast Fellow of the New Zealand Ministry for Research, Science and Technology
2008 Elected Member of the Nordrhein-Westfälische Akademie der Wissenschaften
Selected publications
Martin, W; Mueller, M (1998). "The hydrogen hypothesis for the first eukaryote". Nature . 392 (6671): 37– 41. Bibcode :1998Natur.392...37M . doi :10.1038/32096 . PMID 9510246 . S2CID 338885 .
Martin, W; Stoebe, B; Goremykin, V; Hansmann, S; Hasegawa, M; Kowallik, KV (1998). "Gene transfer to the nucleus and the evolution of chloroplasts". Nature . 393 (6681): 162– 165. Bibcode :1998Natur.393..162M . doi :10.1038/30234 . PMID 11560168 . S2CID 205000315 .
Race, HL; Herrmann, RG; Martin, W (1999). "Why have organelles retained genomes?" (PDF) . Trends in Genetics . 15 (9): 364– 370. doi :10.1016/s0168-9525(99)01766-7 . PMID 10461205 .
Martin, W; Rujan, T; Richly, E; Hansen, A; Cornelsen, S; Lins, T; Leister, D; Stoebe, B; Hasegawa, M; Penny, D (2002). "Evolutionary analysis of Arabidopsis, cyanobacterial, and chloroplast genomes reveals plastid phylogeny and thousands of cyanobacterial genes in the nucleus" . Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA . 99 (19): 12246– 12251. Bibcode :2002PNAS...9912246M . doi :10.1073/pnas.182432999 . PMC 129430 . PMID 12218172 .
Martin, W; Russell, MJ (2003). "On the origins of cells: An hypothesis for the evolutionary transitions from abiotic geochemistry to chemoautotrophic prokaryotes, and from prokaryotes to nucleated cells" . Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B . 358 (1429): 59– 85. doi :10.1098/rstb.2002.1183 . PMC 1693102 . PMID 12594918 .
Weiss, MC; Sousa, FL; Mrnjavac, N; Neukirchen, S; Roettger, M; Nelson-Sathi, S; Martin, WF (2016). "The physiology and habitat of the last universal common ancestor". Nature Microbiology . 1 (9): 16116. doi :10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.116 . PMID 27562259 . S2CID 2997255 .
References
External links
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