Treat Baldwin Johnson

Sheffield Scientific School chemistry class, 1898. Treat Baldwin Johnson is seated center, holding a copy of The New York Voice.

Treat Baldwin Johnson (1875-1947) was an American chemist, born at Bethany, Connecticut.

Biography

He graduated at Yale in 1898, where he also received his Ph.D. in 1901. He became an instructor of chemistry at the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale and in 1908 was advanced to the assistant professorship of organic chemistry of which branch he became full professor in 1915. He published papers on organic synthesis as applied to therapeutic substances, on phenanthrene and its relation to morphine, an account of new local anæsthetics, histamin, tyramin, and cyclic polypeptids. In 1918, he received the Nichols Medal of the American Chemical Society.[1]

Johnson was the editor of the instruction manuals for A. C. Gilbert Company's chemistry sets. He, together with R.D. Coghill, was the first to discover the existence of 5-methylcytosine in nature, from tuberculinic acid, a nucleotide of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.[2]

References

  1. Nichols Medalists of the American Chemical Society
  2. Johnson TB, Coghill RD (1925). "The discovery of 5-methyl-cytosine in tuberculinic acid, the nucleic acid of the Tubercle bacillus". J Am Chem Soc 47 (11): 2838–2844. doi:10.1021/ja01688a030.

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