The Guardian (USA)

Alan Bull obituary

- Mike Goodfellow

My friend and colleague Alan Bull, who has died aged 87, was an internatio­nally renowned microbiolo­gist and pioneer of biotechnol­ogy, developing procedures that opened up new approaches to studying microbial ecology and pathogenic­ity. Such developmen­ts led to Alan chairing an Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t working party on the potential of biotechnol­ogy for industrial sustainabi­lity (1996-98).

Collaborat­ion was central to Alan’s work. Together with Ian Swingland, a conservati­on biology professor at the University of Kent, where Alan spent most of his career, he was a founding trustee in 1989 of the Durrell Trust for Conservati­on Biology, and in 1992 launched a new journal, Biodiversi­ty and Conservati­on, which is still going strong.

Latterly (1988-2020) he headed an internatio­nal team that included myself, as well as professors from Chile, Germany and Japan, among others, which discovered many new antibiotic­s, notably the abbysomici­ns (natural products that have anti-tubercular and anti-cancer properties and are active against HIV), from actinomyce­te bacteria found in extreme habitats ranging from deep-sea sediments of the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench to extreme hyper-arid soils in the Chilean Central Andes.

Alan was honoured to have three microbial species named after him.

Born in Bretby, Derbyshire, to working-class parents, Thomas Bull, a picture-framer, and Selena Morgan, a Welshwoman who worked in a grocer’s, Alan had a happy childhood. After Burton-on-Trent boys’ school he studied botany at the University of Nottingham and stayed on to complete a PhD (1961).

In 1959 Alan met Jennifer Kaye, a zoology student, on a university expedition to the French Alps. They married in 1963, the year Jenny completed her PhD prior to working as a biology teacher. Alan held academic positions at the University of London, Bedford (1961-64) and Queen Elizabeth (1964-70) Colleges, the University of Kent (1970-76) and University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (1976-81), with a year from 1968 at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, as a Fulbright fellow.

In 1982 he returned to Kent as professor and head of the biological laboratory, then as research professor (1998-2003), and emeritus professor of microbial biology. His talents as a teacher and mentor led to many of his PhD students and postdoctor­al fellows embarking on highly successful careers across the world.

Alan was an enthusiast­ic polymath, widely read and travelled, with a love of opera, Japanese gardens and hiking. He was as fun-loving as he was erudite.

A passionate supporter of the arts, he continued to sing for the university choir after retirement. At heart Alan identified with the cultural and political values of south Welsh communitie­s and was overjoyed to be elected to the Learned Society of Wales in 2017.

Alan is survived by Jenny, their daughter, Rachel, son, Adam, and a grandson, Vincent.

 ?? ?? Alan Bull was honoured to have three microbial species named after him
Alan Bull was honoured to have three microbial species named after him

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