Graham Gooday
Graham Gooday | |
---|---|
Scientific career | |
Institutions | University of Aberdeen |
Doctoral students | Neil A. R. Gow[1] |
Graham William Gooday FRSE (1942-2002) was a British molecular biologist. He was Professor of Microbiology at Aberdeen University. He presented the inaugural Fleming Prize Lecture for the Microbiological Society. He served as Director of the Institute of Marine Biology.
Life
He was born on 19 February 1942 in Colchester the son of William Arnold Gooday and has wife Edith May Beeton.[citation needed]
He studied Biology at Bristol University graduating BSc in 1963. He took a year out working as a teacher for Voluntary Service Overseas in Kenema in Sierra Leone. He returned as a research fellow at the University of Leeds as a postgraduate later receiving a doctorate (PhD) in 1968 (from Bristol).
He lectured at Aberdeen University from 1972 and was made a Professor in 1986.
In 1989 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were John M. Kosterlitz, J H Burnett, J E Fothergill, James Mackay Shewan, C H Gimmingham, F W Robertson, George Dunnet and Patrick Thomas Grant.[2]
Publications
- Differentiation in the Mucaroles (1973)
- Fungal Sex Hormones (1974)
- Chitin in Nature and Technology (1975)
- Functions of Trisporic Acid (1978)
- Microbial Polysaccharides and Polysaccharases (1979)
References
- ^ Gow, Neil Andrew Robert (1982). Growth, physiology and ultrastructure of the pathogenic fungus Candida albicans (PhD thesis). University of Aberdeen. OCLC 646445444. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.354942.
- ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X.