The University of Virginia’s Department of Biology and the larger scientific community is mourning the death this month of recently retired professor Michael Menaker, an internationally renowned researcher and a generous mentor.
A giant in the field of circadian rhythms, Menaker was widely considered one of the pioneers in the physiological analysis and identification of circadian pacemakers in the vertebrate nervous and endocrine systems.
He was recruited to UVA in 1987 from the University of Oregon to chair the Department of Biology, and his laboratory’s groundbreaking discoveries included the first single-gene circadian mutation in mammals and the existence of widespread circadian oscillators in peripheral tissues in mammals. The National Science Foundation Center for Biological Timing, conceived and established by former UVA Provost Gene Block, occurred under Menaker’s watch and active support, functioning as the headquarters of a multi-university institute that made pioneering discoveries, it placed UVA at the center of the circadian rhythms universe.
Menaker died Feb. 14, according to a statement released by the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms. He was 86.
“Mike was an internationally renowned researcher, a generous colleague and friend,” Department of Biology chair Deborah Roach said. “When people around the world thought of UVA Biology, the first person that came to mind was Mike Menaker. He was a mentor for many of us, as he was a good listener, yet also very willing to share his opinions with a smile.”