Remembering Nobel Laureate Emeritus Professor Paul D. Boyer

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We are sad to report that UCLA Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry Paul Boyer, who won the 1997 Nobel Prize in chemistry, passed away on June 2, 2018 at age 99.

In collaboration with the Boyer family, the UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry and the UCLA College, Division of Physical Sciences, held a memorial service to celebrate the life of Professor Emeritus Paul D. Boyer on Thursday, July 5, 2018 from at the UCLA Faculty Center.

The news of Professor Boyer’s passing and his impact on the world of science has been featured in many publications including the The Washington Post, The New York TimesLos Angeles Times, and Chemical & Engineering News. A tribute to Boyer by Professor David Eisenberg was featured in the July 27, 2018, issue of Science Magazine.
In 2016, the UCLA Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry established the Paul D. Boyer Teacher-Scholar position to honor Professor Boyer’s contributions to science, UCLA, and the world. Each year, we review applications from around the globe and select one recent Ph.D. graduate as the Paul D. Boyer Teacher-Scholar. Our Boyer Teacher-Scholars conduct cutting-edge postdoctoral research under a faculty member and also teach undergrads who are passionate about chemistry and biochemistry. Donations to the Paul D. Boyer Teacher-Scholar Fund will support postdoctoral research of the Boyer Teacher-Scholar and will also allow opportunities for scientific travel (e.g. conferences). For more information about how to contribute, click here.
From UCLA Newsroom (by Stuart Wolpert)

Paul%2BBoyer%2Bphoto%2Bwith%2Bfamily ThmbUCLA Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry Paul Boyer, who won the 1997 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his pioneering research on how adenosine triphosphate, or ATP — the cellular energy that drives all biological reactions — is formed, died June 2 at age 99.

Boyer, a member of UCLA’s faculty since 1963, called ATP “the currency of cells.”

Paul Boyer is pictured right with his wife and daughters in October 2015. (Photo by Reed Hutchinson)

“It’s an experience of a lifetime,” Boyer had said of winning the Nobel Prize. “The support of basic research by our society makes this kind of work possible. I feel like one of the most fortunate people to have the opportunity to satisfy my own interest in how things work. I just happen to be lucky.”

Boyer devoted his research career to the study of enzymes, particularly to the study of oxidative phosphorylation — the process in which the energy that the human body gets from the combustion of food is converted largely to ATP. Every cell function relies on ATP, from the building of bones to the contraction of muscles and the transmission of nerve impulses.

ATP absorbs the chemical energy released by the combustion of nutrients, a process that includes photosynthesis in plants and digestion in animals, and transfers it to fuel functions that require energy, such as the growth of cell parts, the contraction of muscles, and the transmission of nerve messages. Substantial quantities of ATP are produced and consumed by the human body each day.

The mechanisms by which ATP is made are highly complex and challenged scientists for decades. Boyer’s insights helped illuminate the world’s understanding of these processes. Over several decades, he developed a model of how the various subunits of the ATP enzyme work together as a motor, driving the rotation of a central rotor. Boyer’s model, based on biochemical experiments, was later confirmed by structural studies. Starting in 1948, Boyer’s research was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, with additional funding from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

Pictured above are Paul and Lyda Boyer on the day he won the Nobel Prize. UCLA

“Paul Boyer inspired both trust and ambition in his fellow faculty members, and had perhaps the most positive character of anyone most of us have ever known,” said his friend and colleague David Eisenberg, who is UCLA’s Paul D. Boyer Professor of Molecular Biology and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. “He combined true modesty with unstoppable persistence and unmatched personal interactions.”

When Boyer won the Nobel, Albert Carnesale, who was then UCLA’s chancellor, said, “Professor Boyer is a humble, gracious and dedicated researcher and faculty member who has spent decades working on giving the world a greater understanding of energy storage in cells. Everyone at UCLA is extremely proud of Professor Boyer and this honor he so richly deserves.”

Among his many honors, Boyer was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1970, and won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1955. From 1959 to 1960, he was chairman of the biochemistry section of the American Chemical Society and from 1969 to 1970 he was president of the American Society of Biological Chemists.

In 1963, Boyer was recruited from the University of Minnesota to the division of biochemistry within UCLA’s department of chemistry. As soon as he arrived, recalled Steven Clarke, distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry, Boyer became involved in the nascent Molecular Biology Institute and the plans for a new building to house it. In 1965 he was chosen as the founding director of the institute and served in this capacity until 1983.

He was largely responsible for the Molecular Biology Building that opened in 1976 to serve some 30 faculty members from a wide variety of UCLA departments. In 2000, the building was renamed in his honor. He also spearheaded the organization of UCLA’s interdepartmental doctoral program in molecular biology, which now includes about 140 students.

Boyer had been married to his wife Lyda since 1939. They had three children, Gail Boyer Hayes, Alexandra Boyer and Douglas Boyer; eight grandchildren, Imran Clark, Mashuri Clark, Rashid Clark, Djahari Clark, Faisal Clark, Lisa Hayes, Leah Boyer and Josh Boyer; and six great-grandchildren.

Paul Boyer donated a major share of his Nobel Prize award to provide funding for chemistry postdoctoral fellows at UCLA and two other institutions.

A native of Utah, Boyer earned his bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Brigham Young University in 1939 and a doctoral degree in biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1943. He conducted postdoctoral research at Stanford University and began his independent research career at the University of Minnesota, where he introduced kinetic, isotopic and chemical methods for investigating enzyme mechanisms. He was a member of the University of Minnesota’s faculty for 17 years before joining UCLA’s faculty.

Clarke, a subsequent MBI director, said “Paul’s contributions to the biosciences and to UCLA’s biosciences community were truly transformative. Not only was he the heart and soul of the Molecular Biology Institute, overcoming great odds to make the MBI building a reality, but perhaps most of all he succeeded in finding new ways to enhance the research, teaching and mentorship of the 200 or so UCLA faculty in molecular biology. He leaves a lasting mark on UCLA science.”

Boyer has donated his brain to UCLA for research on Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.