Marilyn Gunner


Marilyn Gunner is a physics professor at the City College of New York and a Fellow of the American Physical Society. She is known for her work on molecular biophysics and structural biology.

Education

Gunner received her B.A. from the State University of New York (Binghamton). She completed her Ph.D. in 1988 at the University of Pennsylvania, where she worked on topics such as electron transfer in proteins with Leslie Dutton.

Career and research

Gunner previously worked in Barry Honig's lab at Columbia University, where she studied the electrostatic control of proteins. She is now a professor in the physics department at CUNY where she has continued to study protein interactions. As of 2021, her 140 publications have been cited over 5,800 times. She is the lead investigator of the Multi-Conformation Continuum Electrostatics project, which is "a biophysics simulation program combining continuum electrostatics and molecular mechanics." Gunner was also part of a collaboration which measured the efficiency of energy storage in cyanobacteria, work that could have implications for astrobiology.
In 2006, Gunner served as the chair of the Division of Biological Physics in the American Physical Society. She currently serves as a member of the editorial board for both the Journal of the Royal Society Interface and Biochimica et Biophysica Acta – Bioenergetics. Gunner has also served as both a general member and a member of the board of directors for the Telluride Science Research Center.

Awards and recognition