Ronald T. Raines is an American chemical biologist.
Education
Raines graduated in 1976 from West Essex High School in North Caldwell, New Jersey. He received Bachelor of Science degrees in chemistry and biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, doing undergraduate research with Christopher T. Walsh. He earned Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in chemistry at with Jeremy R. Knowles, the title of his doctoral thesis being Energetics of Enzymatic Catalysis: Triosephosphate Isomerase.
He was a Helen Hay Whitney postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics at the University of California, San Francisco with William J. Rutter.
He joined the faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1989, and was a Visiting Associate in Chemistry at Caltech in 2009.
Career
He is the Henry Lardy Professor of Biochemistry, Linus Pauling Professor of Chemical Biology, and a Professor of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Raines has made the following noteworthy contributions. Revelation of the basis for the conformational stability of collagen, which is the most abundant protein in animals.
This work led to the discovery of a new chemical force—the n→π* interaction—that contributes to the stability of nearly every protein.
Such hyperstable collagens are in preclinical trials as wound-healing agents. Discovery of how to endow an otherwise innocuous human Ribonucleic acid-cleaving enzyme with toxicity that is specific for cancer cells.
Such a ribonuclease is in a human clinical trial as an anti-cancer agent. Mechanistic Insight on cellular redox homeostasis and on imperatives for the uptake of cationic proteins and peptides by mammalian cells.
Invention of efficient chemical processes to synthesize proteins and to convert crude biomass into useful fuels and chemicals, and fluorogenic probes to image the uptake of molecules into living cells.