Alan M. Stolzenberg was an associate professor of chemistry at West Virginia University, where he spent more than three decades building a research program in inorganic and bioinorganic chemistry centered on iron porphyrins and their relationship to biological catalysis. Born in Pittsburgh, Stolzenberg graduated from the University of Chicago in 1976 before earning his doctorate in chemistry from Stanford University, where his Hertz Fellowship supported research on iron hydroporphyrins — synthetic analogues of siroheme and heme d, the prosthetic groups of nitrite and sulfite reductases in biological nitrogen and sulfur cycles. After a postdoctoral fellowship at UC Berkeley, he joined the faculty at Brandeis University in 1982 before moving to WVU in 1988. He was known within the university community as a dedicated faculty citizen, serving as faculty senate chair and leading the WVU Phi Beta Kappa chapter for many years.
EDUCATION
Graduate Studies
Stanford University
Chemistry
Graduate Thesis
Iron Hydroporphyrins: Analogues of Siroheme and Heme d, Prosthetic Groups of Nitrite and Sulfite Reductases
Undergraduate Studies
University of Chicago
IMPACT STORY
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