Charles E. Warren

The basics

Quick Facts

PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasChemist Scientist Biochemist
Work fieldScience
Gender
Male
Birth17 September 1962, Guildford, United Kingdom
Death30 July 2005 (aged 42 years)
Star signVirgo
The details

Biography

Charles E. Warren (September 17, 1962 – July 30, 2005) was an assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at the University of New Hampshire.

Early life and education

Warren was born on September 17, 1962, in Guildford, UK. He was son of Joan (Staples) Warren and the late Charles Peter Warren. He was educated at Oxford University, where he received his PhD in 1989 under the tutelage of Raymond Dwek, an eminent early leader in glycobiology. His thesis was entitled Glycosylation in Mice and Rats.

Research

After graduation he helped establish the first commercially focused effort in glycotechnology: Oxford Glycosystems, Ltd. He subsequently moved to Toronto, Canada, to broaden his interest in glycosyltransferase and spent his postdoctoral time with Dr. Harry Schachter at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, and two years later across the street with Dr. Jim Dennis at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute. Charles Warren moved to the University of New Hampshire in 2002 as an assistant professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

He conducted research on the structure-function relationships of glycosylation. These specific efforts focused on evolution, animal development and human diseases. He used C. elegans as his model organism.

Awards

After only three years at the University of New Hampshire, he was nominated for a named professorship, the Class of 1944 Award. This university-wide award recognizes outstanding faculty members.

Death

Charles Warren died prematurely on July 30, 2005, in a paragliding accident.

Warren Workshops

Since 2006, Warren Workshops are held every second years in Warren's memory. The initial purpose of the Warren Workshop series on Glycoconjugate Analysis was to bring together concerned analysts in the field to discuss the various methodologies in use with the aim to share and appraise protocols for carbohydrate sequencing. Discussion among the experts in the discipline would hopefully lead to establishing a working framework and course of action to bring unanimity to the goals and requirements of glycoconjugate structural analysis. The growing need, aspirations of automation and high throughput analysis, made open discussion among experts very timely and important.

WW-I, July 6–9, 2006, UNH Glycomics Center, Durham, NH, USA; Organiser: Vern Reinhold

WW-II, July 9–12, 2008, UNH Glycomics Center, Durham, NH, USA; Organiser: Vern Reinhold

WW-III, August 27–30, 2010, Hindasgarden Conference Center, Hindås, Sweden; Organiser: Niclas G. Karlsson

WW-IV, August 8–11, 2012, CCRC, Athens, Georgia USA; Organisers: Mike Tiemeyer and Lance Wells

WW-V, August 6–9, 2014, University of Galway, Ireland; Organisers: Rob Woods and Pauline Rudd

WW-VI, August 24–26, 2016, Sapporo University, Japan; Organisers: Kiyoko Aoki-Kinoshita and Hisashi Narimatsu

WW-VII, August 15–18, 2018, Boston University, Massachusetts, USA; Organisers: Joseph Zaia and Catherine Costello

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 04 Jan 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.