John T. Dingle
John T. Dingle is a British biologist and
rheumatologist. He joined the staff of the
Strangeways Research Laboratory in 1959 as a research assistant to then-director
Honor Fell, and later himself served as director from 1979 to 1993, taking over the position after the death of
Michael Abercrombie. His presence at Strangeways helped to move its research direction toward the original research interests of its founder,
Thomas Strangeways, who sought to understand the physiology of
arthritis and other rheumatic diseases, after many years in which the laboratory specialized more narrowly in
tissue culture and
cell biology. Dingle was the president of
Hughes Hall from 1993 to 1998, and is an honorary fellow. He was the founding chairman of the British Connective Tissue Society (now the British Society for Matrix Biology), serving from 1980 to 1987. From 1975 to 1982 he was Chairman of the Editorial Board of the ''Biochemical Journal''. Among his notable trainees is
University of California, San Francisco cell biologist
Zena Werb, who was a
postdoctoral fellow with Dingle and subsequently worked as a research assistant at Strangeways.
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