Frances Separovic
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Professor Frances Separovic AO FAA | |
|---|---|
| Born | ~1954 |
| Known for | Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. Membrane biophysics. |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Biophysical chemistry |
| Institutions | School of Chemistry University of Melbourne Australia |
Frances Separovic AO FAA (born ~1954)[1] is an Australian biophysical chemist. She is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Chemistry at the University of Melbourne, where she taught physical chemistry and trained graduate students in her discipline.[2] She is credited with developing techniques that utilise nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) to study peptides in lipid bilayers, with applications in the study of the structure of membrane proteins and their effects on membranes.[3] Her more recent research concerns 'the structure and interactions of amyloid peptides from Alzheimer's disease, pore-forming toxins and antibiotic peptides in model biological membranes'.[4]
Franica Šeparović was born in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, People's Republic of Croatia and emigrated to Australia with her family in 1957. They settled in Broken Hill, western New South Wales. Separovic excelled in school and she was awarded both a Commonwealth and teacher's scholarship; she began tertiary studies at the University of Sydney, but soon left to work at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). In addition to working full-time and studying part-time, Separovic was also a young mother.[5]