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Ann English

Canadian bioinorganic chemist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Ann Marie English is an Irish Canadian scientist in bioinorganic chemistry and redox biology, recognized for her contribution to chemistry in Canada.[1]

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Education

English received a BSc from University College Dubin in Ireland in 1971 and a PhD in Inorganic Chemistry from McGill University in Canada in 1980.[2]

Career

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After graduation, English did post-doctoral research at California Institute of Technology as a research fellow in chemistry.[3] Under the direction of Harry B. Gray, she conducted research on electron transfer of copper proteins.[4] She began her academic career at Concordia University as assistant professor in 1982[5] and was promoted to full professor in 1994.[2] Since 2018, she is Distinguished Professor Emerita and Honorary Concordia University Research Chair in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Concordia University.[6] She has mentored over 55 graduate students and 37 postdoctoral fellows and researchers.[7]

Her research field is in heme-protein chemistry and biochemistry,[8][9][10] including the effects of metal-induced oxidation on aging at the cellular level.[11][12][13] She has published over 130 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.[14] With mass spectrometry being one of the techniques used in her research,[15][16][17] she established the Centre for Biological Applications of Mass Spectrometry in 2003.[7]

She was elected as Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada in 2014[18] and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada Academy of Science in 2024.[19][20]

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Awards

References

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