Mentor, Principal Investigator

Jeffrey N. Johnston

2021-pres Vice-Chair, Board of Directors, Arnold & Mabel Beckman Foundation

2019-pres Director, Graduate Recruiting in Chemistry

2008-pres Director, Beckman Scholars Program at Vanderbilt

2021-pres co-Director, NSF REU in Chemical Biology

Stevenson Professor of Chemistry, 2011, Vanderbilt University, TN

Professor, 2006, Vanderbilt University, TN

Professor, 2005, Indiana University, IN

Associate Professor, 2005, Indiana University, IN

Assistant Professor, 1999, Indiana University, IN

NIH Postdoctoral Fellow, 1999, D. A. Evans, Harvard University, MA

Ph.D. Chemistry, 1997, L. A. Paquette, The Ohio State University, OH

B.S. Chemistry, 1992, Xavier University, OH

 

Professor Johnston obtained his B.S. (Honors) in Chemistry (summa cum laude) in 1992 from Xavier University. While at Xavier, he completed his undergraduate thesis research with Professor Robert G. Johnson. He continued his training in organic chemistry at the Ohio State University working with Leo A. Paquette. There, he developed the oxonium ion-mediated pinacol rearrangement and was involved with two efforts in natural products total synthesis (polycavernoside A, taxol). In 1997, he moved to Harvard to join Professor David A. Evans as an NIH postdoctoral fellow. In the Evans group, he developed (with M. Willis, U. Bath) the first highly diastereoselective and enantioselective Mukaiyama-Michael reactions using bisoxazoline copper(II) Lewis acids as catalysts while delineating the associated mechanistic details. He began his independent career at Indiana University in 1999 and was ultimately promoted to Professor of Chemistry with tenure. In 2006, he moved with his research group to Vanderbilt University where he is currently a Stevenson Professor of Chemistry and a member of the Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology. He is also currently Director of the VU-Beckman Scholars Program for undergraduate research. His research program has been recognized by several organizations, including the Boehringer-Ingelheim New Investigator Award, the Yamanouchi and Astellas faculty awards, an Amgen Young Investigator Award, and an Eli Lilly Grantee Award. At Indiana University, he received the IU Outstanding Junior Faculty Award, as well as an IU Trustees Teaching Award. In 2011 at Vanderbilt, he was awarded a Stevenson Endowed Chair, and was a recipient of the Chancellor's Award for Research. He received the ACS Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award in 2014, and a Swiss Chemical Society Lectureship in 2016. In 2011, he was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), a Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Fellow in 2013 & 2019, and an ACS Fellow in 2022. Since 2016, he has served on the Board of Directors for the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation, the leading private supporter of research(ers) in the chemical and biological sciences. His group is a 2-time winner of the VICB Most Highly Cited Article award.

 
 
 

Honors

2000 Boehringer-Ingelheim Young Investigator Award

2002 IU Trustees Teaching Award

2002 Yamanouchi Research Award

2003 Amgen Young Investigator Award

2003 Eli Lilly Grantee Award

2004 IU Outstanding Junior Faculty Award

2009 Beckman Foundation Scholars Program, Executive Committee (through 2012)

2010 Elected AAAS Fellow

2011 Stevenson Chair in Chemistry

2011 Chancellor's Award for Research

2013 VICB Most Highly Cited Article Award

2013 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Fellow

2014 ACS Cope Scholar Award

2015 VICB Most Highly Cited Article Award, VU

2016 Katritzky Lecturer, Univ. of Florida

2016 Swiss Chemical Society Lectureship

2017 Dow Lecturer, U. Minnesota

2017 GIOSS Lecturer, Indianapolis, IN (Eli Lilly, DowAgro, IUPUI)

2018 Guest Editor, Synlett (Thieme)

2019 Fellow, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

2021 co-Director, NSF REU in Chemical Biology

2022 Fellow, American Chemical Society