Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, President Elect of The Royal Society

Nobel laureate Sir Venkatraman (Venki) Ramakrishnan has been confirmed as President Elect of the Royal Society.

Sir Venki, who is currently Deputy Director of the MRC Laboratory for Molecular Biology and a Fellow of Trinity College, will take up the post of President on 1 December 2015.

Sir Venki has a BSc in physics from Baroda University, India and a PhD from Ohio University in the USA.

He studied biology at the University of California, San Diego and worked as a post-doctoral fellow at Yale University.

Subsequently, he was a biophysicist at Brookhaven National Laboratory and professor of biochemistry at the University of Utah before he moved to the UK in 1999.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2003, and is also a member of the US National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina (the German Science Academy), and a Foreign Member of the Indian National Science Academy.

At the MRC Laboratory for Molecular Biology, Sir Venki studies how genetic information is translated by the ribosome to make proteins, and the action of antibiotics on this process.

He received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2009 with Tom Steitz and Ada Yonath and was awarded a knighthood in 2012.

There have been 60 Presidents of the Royal Society since it was founded in 1660, including Christopher Wren, Samuel Pepys, Isaac Newton, Joseph Banks, Humphry Davy, and Ernest Rutherford.

Adapted from a Royal Society press release.


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