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James C Wang

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Name
  
James Wang


James C. Wang httpsdb1nsinicaedutwtextdbacademiciansima

Books
  
Untangling the Double Helix: DNA Entanglement and the Action of the DNA Topoisomerases

Education
  
University of Missouri (1961–1964), National Taiwan University

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada, NAS Award in Molecular Biology

James C. Wang (Chinese: 王倬, born November 18, 1936) is Chinese-born American biochemist and biologist. He is a Harvard University Professor of biochemistry and molecular biology. Wang was the first discoverer of topoisomerases. He was elected as an academician of the Taiwan Academia Sinica in 1982 and a member of the United States National Academy of Science.

After his bachelor's degree at National Taiwan University and his doctoral studies at the University of Missouri, he became a research fellow at the California Institute of Technology. He then taught at the University of California at Berkeley from 1966 until 1977, when he joined the faculty at Harvard University. He was named the Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Harvard in 1988. Retired in 2006.

Wang discovered DNA topoisomerases (or local enzymes) and proposed a mechanism for their operation in the 1970s. He also studied the configuration (or topology) of DNA, an approach that proved fruitful in helping to explain how the structure of the double helix coils and relaxes.

References

James C. Wang Wikipedia