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Alan Walton

Alan G. Walton OBE (April 3, 1936 – July 4, 2015) was a scientist, businessman, and venture capitalist. He was born in England in 1936 and earned a Ph.D. from the University of Nottingham. He worked for twenty years as a professor at Case Western Reserve University and later served as the Chairman of Oxford Bioscience Corporation. Walton was instrumental in the development and funding of the Human Genome Project. Through his association with Oxford Bioscience, Walton managed over $850 million in a portfolio that included 80 companies. In 2012, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II. He died in 2015 at his home in Westport, Connecticut.

Alan Walton
Alan Walton, 2013
Born(1936-04-03)April 3, 1936
DiedJuly 4, 2015(2015-07-04) (aged 79)
NationalityAmerican
Awards2013 Richard J. Bolte Sr., Award for Supporting Industries
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry

Early life, family, and education edit

Alan George Walton was born April 3, 1936, in Kings Norton, Birmingham, England.[1] Growing up in wartime Britain, Walton's earliest memories were of the Blitz and the wartime privations common to British people at the time.[2] He attended Kings Norton Boys Grammar School, where he developed his first interest in the subject of chemistry.[3] He later enrolled at the University of Nottingham, earning a B.S. in Chemistry. Walton played in a rock band during his time at Nottingham, but was forced to give it up to pay more attention to his studies.[4] He also served in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve while at school, where he learned to fly a DHC-1 Chipmunk.[5] Walton went on to earn a Ph.D. in physical chemistry in 1960, also from Nottingham.

While in school, Walton married Jasmin Christensen in 1958.[6] They had two children, Kimm and Keir, and remained married until her death in 1970.[1] In 1972 he married archaeologist Nancy White of Cleveland, Ohio, but they soon divorced. In 1977, he married E.J. Egolf and adopted her two children Kristin and Sherri.[7][8] They remained married for the rest of Walton's life.[1] He died in 2015 at his home in Westport, Connecticut at the age of 79.[1]

Academic career and awards edit

After finishing his doctoral program, Walton moved to the United States where he initially taught and did postdoctoral research at the University of Indiana.[9] In 1961, he was hired as an assistant professor at the Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland, Ohio, where he remained until 1981.[10] In 1967, Case merged with the Western Reserve University to become Case Western Reserve University. For a part of Walton's time there, from 1971 to 1973, he was a visiting professor of biological chemistry at Harvard Medical School.[10] While teaching, he earned a further degree, a D.Sc. in biological chemistry, from Nottingham in 1973.[10]

At Case Western, Walton served as Professor of Macromolecular Science. Walton's early research at Case involved the formation of crystals, or nucleation.[11] In 1966, he was promoted to associate professor and granted tenure; he became a full professor in 1971.[12] The following year, in coordination with Helga Furedi-Milhofer, Walton became the director of a joint research project with the Ruđer Bošković Institute in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (present-day Croatia).[13] The collaboration resulted in a book Walton co-wrote with Furedi-Milhofer, The Formation and Properties of Precipitates, published in 1979.[14] One reviewer called the book "a readable and current introduction into the state of our knowledge concerning precipitate formation and properties."[15] In all, Walton the author of over 120 scientific articles and ten books, focusing on aging, molecular hematology, biopolymers, epitaxy, gene splicing, new pro-drugs, as well as the molecular basis of various diseases.

He was also a member of President Jimmy Carter's Technology Transfer Committee from 1977 to 1981.[10] Among the results of that committee's work was the Bayh–Dole Act of 1980, which allowed universities to commercially license technology arising from federal government-funded research.[16]

In 1972, Walton was awarded the Israel State Medal Presented by Israel Academy of Science. Other awards followed, including the Sigma Chi Research Award For contributions to science (1974); the Rudjer Boskovic Institute Award Presented by Yugoslav Academy of Science (1979); and the Richard J. Bolte Sr. Award for supporting industries (2013).[17] He was named an Honorary Distinguished Adjunct Professor Case Western Reserve University in 2007. In 2012, Queen Elizabeth II awarded Walton the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for "services to the UK biotechnology industry."[18]

Walton's research resulted in two patents. The first, for chondroitin drug complexes, was granted in 1984 to Walton, Randall V. Sparer, and Nnochiro Ekwuribe. It involves "a novel class of pro drugs in which the drug substance is bonded ionically or covalently to a glycosaminoglycan of the class of the chondroitins, and to the use of such prodrugs in the treatment of animal and human patients."[19] Walton's second patent, granted in 1987, was for bioactive compositions affecting human skin tissue.[20]

Business career edit

Walton's first foray into the business world was a part-time job running Biopolymer Corporation, a company he founded while still at Case Western in 1978.[21] The company manufactured and sold biopolymers, and employed many of the post-doc and grad students that Walton knew from his teaching career.[22]

In 1981, Walton moved from academics to business full-time to found one of the first biotechnology companies, University Genetics.[21] The company was founded to enhance and commercialize university-based inventions and had exclusive licenses to patent or sell all inventions from 12 major universities and non-exclusives with 71. In an interview with The New York Times, Walton said "My new company addresses the problem—raising money from the public sector and funding research at universities. Then if ideas are developed useful to industrial users, we take a fee along the way. The job will give me a chance to keep in contact with industries all over the world."[21] In 1983, the company went public and in 1986 it completed a secondary offering in which the original investors were bought out for $3.6 million, giving them a sixty-fold return on investment in five years.[23][24] During Walton's tenure as CEO, the company’s focus shifted to funding start-up companies and working with venture capital firms.[24] In that time, he was co-author of several treatises on the companies active in the biotechnology field, their strategies and relative success and failures (biotechnology Yearbook, Elsevier, 1983, 1985, 1986–1987) which led to his consulting with several venture capital firms. One firm he helped launch developed docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), an important component of baby formula.[1]

Walton left University Genetics in 1987 to join venture capitalist firm Oxford Bioscience Partners.[24] According to the firm, Walton was probably the first former tenured professor of molecular biology in the venture capital industry, which then was mainly run by businesspeople with little bio-technical understanding. Walton's strategy was to finance new, university-based technologies with strong patent positions and make them the centerpiece of new companies.[24] Companies financed by Oxford included Martek Biosciences Corporation, Geron Corporation, Exelixis, and Gene Finder, among others.[24] In 1992, Walton, Wally Steinberg, and Craig Venter founded Human Genome Sciences (HGS), a company that bought the assets of Gene Finder and sought to use human DNA sequences to develop protein and antibody drugs.[25][26] Around the same time, Walton helped Venter set up The Institute for Genome Research, a non-profit the discoveries of which were marketed by HGS.[25][27] HGS went public the next year and the stock was heavily subscribed.[25][28]

Adventurer edit

Walton was an adventurous traveler. He also climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in 1989, sky dived at the North Pole in 2004, bungee jumped off the Bloukrans Bridge near Cape Town, South Africa in 2009, HALO jumped from 29,600 feet, and was a member of the first team of people to skydive over Mount Everest.[24] Walton also continued to fly small planes, drawing on the training he gained in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve.[29] He was one of the first 100 people to pay for a trip into space through Virgin Galactic in 2004; after years of delays in getting the project off the ground, Walton was forced to ask for a refund in 2011, citing his advanced age.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Obituary 2015.
  2. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 1–5.
  3. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 6–7, 12–15.
  4. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 16–22.
  5. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 34–39.
  6. ^ Marriage Index 2010.
  7. ^ Ohio Marriage Index 2010.
  8. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 130–131.
  9. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 45–54.
  10. ^ a b c d Avalon 2007.
  11. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 58–59.
  12. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 60, 107.
  13. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 68–69.
  14. ^ Walton & Furedi 1967.
  15. ^ Howick 1967, p. 80A.
  16. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 116–119.
  17. ^ "Richard J. Bolte Sr. Award for Supporting Industries". Science History Institute. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  18. ^ "No. 60173". The London Gazette (1st supplement). 16 June 2012. p. 24.
  19. ^ US patent 4489065 
  20. ^ US patent 4702912 
  21. ^ a b c Fowler 1981.
  22. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 131–132.
  23. ^ Hartford Courant 1986.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Oxford Bio 2007.
  25. ^ a b c Walton 2000, pp. 158–159.
  26. ^ Venter 2007, p. 156.
  27. ^ Venter 2007, pp. 164–165.
  28. ^ Baltimore Sun 1993.
  29. ^ Walton 2000, pp. 120–129.
  30. ^ Associated Press 2011.

Sources edit

Books

  • Venter, J. Craig (2007). A Life Decoded: My Genome: My Life. New York, New York: Penguin. ISBN 978-0670063581.
  • Walton, Alan G.; Furedi, Helga (1967). The Formation and Properties of Precipitates. Huntington, New York: Robert E. Krieger. OCLC 799693407.
  • Walton, Alan G. (2000). Beneath this Gruff Exterior There Beats a Heart of Plastic. Naperville, Illinois: Oak Hill Publishing. ISBN 1-891743-02-3.

Journals

  • Howick, Lester C. (1967). "Book reviews – The formation and properties of precipitates". Analytical Chemistry. 39 (14): 80A–81A. doi:10.1021/ac50157a012.

Websites

  • . Avalon Pharmaceuticals. Archived from the original on 2007-08-08.
  • "Alan G. Walton: Scientist, Venture Capitalist & Adventurer" (PDF). Oxford Bioscience Partners.
  • "England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916–2005". Ancestry.com. General Register Office. 2010. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  • "Ohio, Marriage Abstracts, 1970, 1972–2007". Ancestry.com. Ohio Department of Health, Office of Vital Statistics. 2010. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  • Alan Walton at Find a Grave

Newspapers

  • Fowler, Elizabeth M. (June 24, 1981). "Molecular Biology and Business". The New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  • "University Genetics". Hartford Courant. May 8, 1986. p. D7. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  • "Human Genome's stock soars". Baltimore Sun. December 3, 1993. p. 18D. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  • "Dream of Space Travel Over for Businessman". Leader-Telegram. Eau Claire, Wisconsin. October 9, 2011. p. 6D. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  • "Alan G. Walton, 79". Westport Now. Westport, Connecticut. July 7, 2015. Retrieved February 7, 2019.

alan, walton, alan, walton, april, 1936, july, 2015, scientist, businessman, venture, capitalist, born, england, 1936, earned, from, university, nottingham, worked, twenty, years, professor, case, western, reserve, university, later, served, chairman, oxford, . Alan G Walton OBE April 3 1936 July 4 2015 was a scientist businessman and venture capitalist He was born in England in 1936 and earned a Ph D from the University of Nottingham He worked for twenty years as a professor at Case Western Reserve University and later served as the Chairman of Oxford Bioscience Corporation Walton was instrumental in the development and funding of the Human Genome Project Through his association with Oxford Bioscience Walton managed over 850 million in a portfolio that included 80 companies In 2012 he was awarded the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II He died in 2015 at his home in Westport Connecticut Alan WaltonAlan Walton 2013Born 1936 04 03 April 3 1936Kings Norton Birmingham EnglandDiedJuly 4 2015 2015 07 04 aged 79 Westport Connecticut U S NationalityAmericanAwards2013 Richard J Bolte Sr Award for Supporting IndustriesScientific careerFieldsChemistry Contents 1 Early life family and education 2 Academic career and awards 3 Business career 4 Adventurer 5 References 6 SourcesEarly life family and education editAlan George Walton was born April 3 1936 in Kings Norton Birmingham England 1 Growing up in wartime Britain Walton s earliest memories were of the Blitz and the wartime privations common to British people at the time 2 He attended Kings Norton Boys Grammar School where he developed his first interest in the subject of chemistry 3 He later enrolled at the University of Nottingham earning a B S in Chemistry Walton played in a rock band during his time at Nottingham but was forced to give it up to pay more attention to his studies 4 He also served in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve while at school where he learned to fly a DHC 1 Chipmunk 5 Walton went on to earn a Ph D in physical chemistry in 1960 also from Nottingham While in school Walton married Jasmin Christensen in 1958 6 They had two children Kimm and Keir and remained married until her death in 1970 1 In 1972 he married archaeologist Nancy White of Cleveland Ohio but they soon divorced In 1977 he married E J Egolf and adopted her two children Kristin and Sherri 7 8 They remained married for the rest of Walton s life 1 He died in 2015 at his home in Westport Connecticut at the age of 79 1 Academic career and awards editAfter finishing his doctoral program Walton moved to the United States where he initially taught and did postdoctoral research at the University of Indiana 9 In 1961 he was hired as an assistant professor at the Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland Ohio where he remained until 1981 10 In 1967 Case merged with the Western Reserve University to become Case Western Reserve University For a part of Walton s time there from 1971 to 1973 he was a visiting professor of biological chemistry at Harvard Medical School 10 While teaching he earned a further degree a D Sc in biological chemistry from Nottingham in 1973 10 At Case Western Walton served as Professor of Macromolecular Science Walton s early research at Case involved the formation of crystals or nucleation 11 In 1966 he was promoted to associate professor and granted tenure he became a full professor in 1971 12 The following year in coordination with Helga Furedi Milhofer Walton became the director of a joint research project with the Ruđer Boskovic Institute in Zagreb Yugoslavia present day Croatia 13 The collaboration resulted in a book Walton co wrote with Furedi Milhofer The Formation and Properties of Precipitates published in 1979 14 One reviewer called the book a readable and current introduction into the state of our knowledge concerning precipitate formation and properties 15 In all Walton the author of over 120 scientific articles and ten books focusing on aging molecular hematology biopolymers epitaxy gene splicing new pro drugs as well as the molecular basis of various diseases He was also a member of President Jimmy Carter s Technology Transfer Committee from 1977 to 1981 10 Among the results of that committee s work was the Bayh Dole Act of 1980 which allowed universities to commercially license technology arising from federal government funded research 16 In 1972 Walton was awarded the Israel State Medal Presented by Israel Academy of Science Other awards followed including the Sigma Chi Research Award For contributions to science 1974 the Rudjer Boskovic Institute Award Presented by Yugoslav Academy of Science 1979 and the Richard J Bolte Sr Award for supporting industries 2013 17 He was named an Honorary Distinguished Adjunct Professor Case Western Reserve University in 2007 In 2012 Queen Elizabeth II awarded Walton the Order of the British Empire OBE for services to the UK biotechnology industry 18 Walton s research resulted in two patents The first for chondroitin drug complexes was granted in 1984 to Walton Randall V Sparer and Nnochiro Ekwuribe It involves a novel class of pro drugs in which the drug substance is bonded ionically or covalently to a glycosaminoglycan of the class of the chondroitins and to the use of such prodrugs in the treatment of animal and human patients 19 Walton s second patent granted in 1987 was for bioactive compositions affecting human skin tissue 20 Business career editWalton s first foray into the business world was a part time job running Biopolymer Corporation a company he founded while still at Case Western in 1978 21 The company manufactured and sold biopolymers and employed many of the post doc and grad students that Walton knew from his teaching career 22 In 1981 Walton moved from academics to business full time to found one of the first biotechnology companies University Genetics 21 The company was founded to enhance and commercialize university based inventions and had exclusive licenses to patent or sell all inventions from 12 major universities and non exclusives with 71 In an interview with The New York Times Walton said My new company addresses the problem raising money from the public sector and funding research at universities Then if ideas are developed useful to industrial users we take a fee along the way The job will give me a chance to keep in contact with industries all over the world 21 In 1983 the company went public and in 1986 it completed a secondary offering in which the original investors were bought out for 3 6 million giving them a sixty fold return on investment in five years 23 24 During Walton s tenure as CEO the company s focus shifted to funding start up companies and working with venture capital firms 24 In that time he was co author of several treatises on the companies active in the biotechnology field their strategies and relative success and failures biotechnology Yearbook Elsevier 1983 1985 1986 1987 which led to his consulting with several venture capital firms One firm he helped launch developed docosahexaenoic acid DHA an important component of baby formula 1 Walton left University Genetics in 1987 to join venture capitalist firm Oxford Bioscience Partners 24 According to the firm Walton was probably the first former tenured professor of molecular biology in the venture capital industry which then was mainly run by businesspeople with little bio technical understanding Walton s strategy was to finance new university based technologies with strong patent positions and make them the centerpiece of new companies 24 Companies financed by Oxford included Martek Biosciences Corporation Geron Corporation Exelixis and Gene Finder among others 24 In 1992 Walton Wally Steinberg and Craig Venter founded Human Genome Sciences HGS a company that bought the assets of Gene Finder and sought to use human DNA sequences to develop protein and antibody drugs 25 26 Around the same time Walton helped Venter set up The Institute for Genome Research a non profit the discoveries of which were marketed by HGS 25 27 HGS went public the next year and the stock was heavily subscribed 25 28 Adventurer editWalton was an adventurous traveler He also climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in 1989 sky dived at the North Pole in 2004 bungee jumped off the Bloukrans Bridge near Cape Town South Africa in 2009 HALO jumped from 29 600 feet and was a member of the first team of people to skydive over Mount Everest 24 Walton also continued to fly small planes drawing on the training he gained in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve 29 He was one of the first 100 people to pay for a trip into space through Virgin Galactic in 2004 after years of delays in getting the project off the ground Walton was forced to ask for a refund in 2011 citing his advanced age 30 References edit a b c d e Obituary 2015 Walton 2000 pp 1 5 Walton 2000 pp 6 7 12 15 Walton 2000 pp 16 22 Walton 2000 pp 34 39 Marriage Index 2010 Ohio Marriage Index 2010 Walton 2000 pp 130 131 Walton 2000 pp 45 54 a b c d Avalon 2007 Walton 2000 pp 58 59 Walton 2000 pp 60 107 Walton 2000 pp 68 69 Walton amp Furedi 1967 Howick 1967 p 80A Walton 2000 pp 116 119 Richard J Bolte Sr Award for Supporting Industries Science History Institute Retrieved 23 March 2018 No 60173 The London Gazette 1st supplement 16 June 2012 p 24 US patent 4489065 US patent 4702912 a b c Fowler 1981 Walton 2000 pp 131 132 Hartford Courant 1986 a b c d e f Oxford Bio 2007 a b c Walton 2000 pp 158 159 Venter 2007 p 156 Venter 2007 pp 164 165 Baltimore Sun 1993 Walton 2000 pp 120 129 Associated Press 2011 Sources editBooks Venter J Craig 2007 A Life Decoded My Genome My Life New York New York Penguin ISBN 978 0670063581 Walton Alan G Furedi Helga 1967 The Formation and Properties of Precipitates Huntington New York Robert E Krieger OCLC 799693407 Walton Alan G 2000 Beneath this Gruff Exterior There Beats a Heart of Plastic Naperville Illinois Oak Hill Publishing ISBN 1 891743 02 3 Journals Howick Lester C 1967 Book reviews The formation and properties of precipitates Analytical Chemistry 39 14 80A 81A doi 10 1021 ac50157a012 Websites Management Board of Directors Avalon Pharmaceuticals Archived from the original on 2007 08 08 Alan G Walton Scientist Venture Capitalist amp Adventurer PDF Oxford Bioscience Partners England amp Wales Civil Registration Marriage Index 1916 2005 Ancestry com General Register Office 2010 Retrieved February 19 2019 Ohio Marriage Abstracts 1970 1972 2007 Ancestry com Ohio Department of Health Office of Vital Statistics 2010 Retrieved February 26 2019 Alan Walton at Find a GraveNewspapers Fowler Elizabeth M June 24 1981 Molecular Biology and Business The New York Times Retrieved February 25 2019 University Genetics Hartford Courant May 8 1986 p D7 Retrieved February 25 2019 Human Genome s stock soars Baltimore Sun December 3 1993 p 18D Retrieved February 26 2019 Dream of Space Travel Over for Businessman Leader Telegram Eau Claire Wisconsin October 9 2011 p 6D Retrieved February 26 2019 Alan G Walton 79 Westport Now Westport Connecticut July 7 2015 Retrieved February 7 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alan Walton amp oldid 1044210063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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