Brian M. Stoltz is currently a professor of chemistry at the California Institute of Technology.
Education
Stoltz received his Bachelor of Surgery from Indiana University of Pennsylvania in 1993. He went on to earn his Doctor of Philosophy at Yale University, where he studied organic chemistry under the supervision of John L. Wood, completing his studies in 1997. Upon completion of his graduate work, he held a post-doctoral appointment in the laboratory of East. J. Corey at Harvard University from 1998 to 2000.
Career
The primary focus of his research is chemical synthesis with an emphasis on the development of new strategies for the preparation of complex molecules possessing unique structural, biological, and physical properties. His research involves the total synthesis of natural products such as dragmacidin F and (–)-cyanthiwigin F, and development of synthetic reactions to access quaternary stereocenters. Specifically, he has focused on the allylic alkylation of enolates, developing an enantioselective variant in 2004.
J. At present he is the associate editor for the Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry.
Membership
Several former members of the Stoltz laboratory have gone on to start research groups of their own, such as Richmond Sarpong (University of California-Berkeley), Uttam Tambar (Utah-Southwestern Medical Center), Neil Garg (University of California, Los Angeles), Jeremy May (University of Houston), Eric Ferreira (Georgia Technical) and Hosea Nelson (University of California, Los Angeles).