PULLMAN, Wash. — Clarence A. “Bud” Ryan, a pioneer researcher in plant biochemistry and the first Washington State University faculty member to be admitted to the National Academy of Sciences, will receive an honorary doctor of science degree from WSU.
The WSU Board of Regents approved the honor at its meeting Friday (Jan. 28). The university has not awarded an honorary doctorate since 1995 and has awarded only four such degrees in the last half-century.
“It is rare for
The award will be presented during spring commencement ceremonies in May.
“Dr. Ryan’s 40-year career at WSU is one of lasting scientific triumphs and one that has set the compass course for campus research in the foreseeable future,” wrote
Ryan, an emeritus faculty member in the Institute of Biological Chemistry who has continued an active research effort well into his “retirement” years, is internationally known for his discoveries that plants produce natural insecticides to protect themselves from predation by herbivores. These natural insecticides, known as protease inhibitors, prevent insects and microorganisms from digesting food proteins.
“Today, Bud’s research on the protease-inhibitors, used by potatoes and tomatoes as natural chemical defenses in response to leaf-chewing (herbivorous) insects, provides the most comprehensive and unambiguous understanding of any of the thousands of known and suspected mechanisms used in the plant kingdom against insect pests,” Griswold and Cook wrote.
“WSU is well-known around the world among scientists and educated people, especially in the area of plant research, because of the accomplishments of Clarence A. Ryan.,” they wrote. “Perhaps if Bud had not come to WSU, we would still have a good plant science program, but his presence and his reputation have catalyzed the excellence we currently have.”
Born in
In 1981 and 1982, he took a sabbatical to learn more about molecular biology at the
Ryan served as chair of the Department of Agricultural Chemistry from 1977 to 1980, as acting director of WSU’s Institute for Biological Chemistry from 1989-90, and was named the Charlotte Y. Martin Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry and Plant Physiology in 1991.
For more information on the Honorary Doctoral Degrees Committee and past recipients, visit https://www.wsu.edu/president/committees/honorary-doctoral.html.
