Ana Jonas


Ana Masiulis Jonas was an American biochemist born in Lithuania. She was on the faculty of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign from 1974 until 2001. Her research "advanced our understanding of the role lipoproteins play in cardiovascular disease".

Early life and education

Ana Masiulis was born in Rokiškis, Lithuania. She was a refugee in Germany as a baby, and was raised in Argentina. She moved to the United States in 1962, with her family. She graduated from the University of Illinois Chicago in 1966, and completed doctoral studies in biochemistry at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1970. Her doctoral dissertation was titled "Physicochemical Studies on the Tertiary Structure of Bovine Serum Albumin." She was granted United States citizenship in 1967.

Career

Jonas joined the faculty of UIUC in 1974, started her own laboratory in 1977, and achieve full professor status in 1985. She and her colleague Charles Matz developed a technique for generating reconstituted HDL, which was used in laboratories for decades afterward. She studied the structure of apolipoprotein A1, and its role in cardiovascular health. She also studied the enzyme lecithin–cholesterol acyltransferase.
Jonas chaired the Gordon Research Conference on Lipid Metabolism in 1990. She received the Lyman Duff Lectureship Award from the American Heart Association. In 2024, she received the Jack Oram Lifetime Achievement Award for HDL Research.

Publications

Personal life

Ana Masiulis married Czech-born chemist Jiri Jonas in 1968. The Jonases retired to Naples, Florida, in 2001. She died in 2024, at the age of 79, while vacationing in Alaska.