Donald Herman Voet (November 29, 1938 – April 11, 2023) was an American biochemist who was emeritus associate professor of chemistry at the
University of Pennsylvania. His laboratory used
x-ray crystallography to understand structure-function relationships in proteins.[1] He and his wife,
Judith G. Voet, are authors of biochemistry text books that are widely used in undergraduate and graduate curricula.[2][3][4][5]
Voet completed his postdoctoral research at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1969 in the laboratory of
Alexander Rich. He later became a professor in the chemistry department at the University of Pennsylvania. Voet and his wife were coeditors-in-chief of the journal Biochemical and Molecular Biology Education.[1][5]
^
abWood, E.J. (1 October 1999). "Book review: Biochemistry in a nutshell - Fundamentals of Biochemistry by Donald Voet, Judith G. Voet and Charlotte W. Pratt". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 24 (10): 409–410.
doi:
10.1016/S0968-0004(99)01447-4.
^Sodja, Ann (1996). "Book Review - Biochemistry". International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation. 37 (3–4): 233–235.
doi:
10.1016/0964-8305(96)88252-7.
^Voet, D. and Lipscomb, W. N., "Molecular Structure of Carboranes. A 1,2-Dicarbaclovododecaborane Derivative, B10H10(CCH2Br)2," Inorg. Chem. 3, 1679 (1964).
^Voet, D. and Lipscomb, W. N., "Molecular and Crystal Structure of B7C2H11(CH3)2," Inorg. Chem. 6, 113-119 (1967).