Marian Johnson-Thompson | |
Workplaces: | National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences University of the District of Columbia University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Alma Mater: | Howard University Georgetown University |
Thesis Title: | Effect of 5-Azacytidine on simian virus 40 DNA replication |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6039668 |
Thesis Year: | 1978 |
Field: | Virology |
Marian Cecelia Johnson-Thompson (born December 9, 1946) is an American virologist who was a professor at the University of the District of Columbia. She was elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Johnson-Thompson was born in Boston in 1946.[1] She moved to Riviera Beach, Florida as a child, where she attended high school. As an undergraduate student at Howard University, Johnson-Thompson specialized in microbiology, and graduated with a master's degree in 1971. She moved to Georgetown University for her graduate studies, where she focused on molecular virology. Only a few years after segregation, Johnson-Thompson was the first American-born Black person to complete the graduate program. She completed her doctoral research in the Georgetown University Medical Center in 1978.[2]
Johnson-Thompson's research spanned several different aspects of virology. Initially, she studied the mechanisms of action of azacytidine against SV40. She has also investigated the impact of ultraviolet (UV) laser therapy on the stability of viral DNA. She has studied the molecular mechanisms that underpin breast cancer, showing that women of colour were most likely to suffer from environmental-induced breast cancer.[3] This study alerted her to the need for minority sciences to be better represented in medical research.
After retiring from University of the District of Columbia in 1994, Johnson-Thompson joined the National Institutes of Health as the director of education and biomedical research development at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS),[4] where she was responsible for clinical trials, including the Sister Study, which looked to understand the environmental causes of breast cancer. She found that African-American women were more likely to have more delayed cancer treatment diagnoses, as well as more prolonged treatment.[5] Johnson-Thompson retired from NIEHS in 2008.[6]
Johnson-Thompson established a scholarship at Howard University which supports women scientists from marginalized groups. The scholarship was named after Marie Taylor. In 1997 Johnson-Thompson established the Bridging Education Science and Technology Program at Hillside High School, introducing high school students to molecular biology.
Dr. Marian Johnson-Thompson was born to Rose Mae Henderson Beavers, born in 1919 from Galveston, Texas. Her mother attended Holy Rosary Catholic School as well as the Holy Rosary Catholic Church. Her Father was Edwin Saint Aloyious Johnson was born in 1908 in Kingston, Jamaica to a Haitian Mother and Cuban Father. Her father later immigrated to the United States where he attended Columbia University and obtained his master’s degree. Her father later moved to Galveston, Texas where he worked as a USO and met her mother, Ms. Henderson Beavers. Mr. Edwin Johnson later attended medical school in Boston City College. He later owned his own practice in Clewiston, Florida.[13]
Dr. Marian Johnson-Thompson attended Grade School in Clewiston, Florida where she lived with her father. After her father died in 1961, she continued to live with her Stepmother until she finished High School at John F. Kennedy High School. She later attended Howard University, where she was advised by a Botanist Marie Clark Taylor and Biologist John Rear[14].
Dr. Marian Johnson- Thompson was the founder of Minority Women in Science which was founded in 1978. She organized Science discovery days events that were used to introduce minority students and women to STEM at an early age. She also established the Minority women in science Christmas Store. This program allowed children to earn currency which they could use to purchase scientific books.[14] Johnson-Thompson is married with two children.
Dr. Marian Johnson-Thompson understood the importance of mentorship. While at the University of the District of Columbia she directly mentored 14 undergraduates and master's level students. She also mentored 17 Ph.D. level students. In 2001, she was named Meyerhoff Scholars Mentor of the Year[15].
Some of her doctoral degree mentees include Ashalla Magee Freeman now director of Diversity Affairs at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, office of Graduate Education; Kenneth Gibbs now program analyst at National Institute of General Medical Science, National Institute of Health (NIH). Elena Braithwaite now Toxicologist at the FDA in Rockville, MD; Sherilynn Black now assistant professor at Duke University School of Medicine and Pocahontas Jones Ph.D. in Microbiology and immunology currently working at Halifax Community College [15].
In 1997, Dr. Johnson- Thompson established the Bridging Education Science and Technology program at Hillside High School in Durham, North Carolina. The programs utilized equipment and scientists from the National Institutes of Environmental Health Science (NIEHS) to educate the students with hands-on molecular biology experiences[13]. In 1994, She also established the Johnson-Thompson Taylor Endowed scholarship at Howard University in honor of her mentor Dr. Marie Taylor who was the first female to earn a Ph.D. at Fordham University[15].