Jeremy M. Berg, PhD
Director
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
National Institutes
of Health
Bethesda, Maryland
Speaker Topic: Welcoming Remarks
Dr. Berg became director of the National Institute of General
Medical Sciences (NIGMS) in November 2003. He oversees a
$1.9 billion budget that funds basic research in the areas of cell
biology, biophysics, genetics, developmental biology, pharmacology,
physiology, biological chemistry, bioinformatics, and computational
biology. The Institute supports more than 4,500 research
grants-about 10 percent of the grants funded by NIH as a whole-as
well as a substantial amount of research training and programs
designed to increase the number of minority biomedical scientists.
Prior to his appointment as NIGMS director, Dr. Berg directed
the Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences at The Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine in Baltimore, MD, where he also served
as professor and director of the Department of Biophysics and Biophysical
Chemistry. In addition, he directed the Markey Center for Macromolecular
Structure and Function and co-directed the W.M. Keck Center for
the Rational Design of Biologically Active Molecules at the university.
Dr. Berg's research focuses on the structural and functional roles
that metal ions, especially zinc, have in proteins. He has
made major contributions to understanding how zinc-containing proteins
bind to DNA or RNA and regulate gene activity. His work,
and that of others in the field, has led to the design of metal-containing
proteins that control the activity of specific genes. These
tailored proteins are valuable tools for basic research on gene
function and could one day have medical applications in regulating
genes involved in diseases as well. Dr. Berg has also made
contributions to our understanding of systems that target proteins
to specific compartments within cells and to the use of sequence
databases for predicting aspects of protein structure and function.
Dr. Berg served on the faculty at Johns Hopkins from 1986-2003.
Immediately before his faculty appointment, he was a postdoctoral
fellow in biophysics at the university. His honors include
a Presidential Young Investigator Award (1988 -1993), the American
Chemical Society Award in Pure Chemistry (1993), the Eli Lilly
Award for Fundamental Research in Biological Chemistry (1995),
and the Maryland Outstanding Young Scientist of the Year (1995).
He also received teaching awards from both medical students and
graduate students and served as an advisor to the Johns Hopkins
Postdoctoral Association from its founding.
Dr. Berg received B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemistry from Stanford
University in 1980 and a Ph.D. in chemistry from Harvard University
in 1985. He is a coauthor of more than 120 research papers
and three textbooks, Principles of Bioinorganic Chemistry,
Biochemistry (5th Edition), and A
Clinical Companion to Accompany Biochemistry.
NIGMS supported Dr. Berg's research from 1986-2003. |