ɬÀï·¬

In Memoriam

In memoriam: Catherine Squires

ASBMB Today Staff
Nov. 1, 2021

Catherine L. Squires, a microbiologist whose research reflected her lifelong interest in how bacterial ribosomes work, died Aug. 3 at her home in Winters, California.

Catherine Squires

Born April 9, 1941, in Sacramento, Squires grew up visiting dairy and chicken ranches owned by members of her family. She gained a lifelong appreciation of nature and agriculture, according to her ; in an autobiographical article, she described taking water samples from her father’s chicken coop to school for show and tell. She received bachelor’s and master’s degrees at the University of California, Davis, where she met and married her husband, Craig.

While earning a Ph.D. in molecular biology at biochemistry at UC Santa Barbara, Squires determined the structure of several transfer RNAs in E. coli. During a postdoc with Charles Yanofsky at Stanford University, she investigated transcription and translation of genes in the trp operon, which became a famous model system for biosynthetic feedback because its activity is high when its product, tryptophan, is low and vice versa.

Squires began her career as an assistant professor at Dartmouth University, then moved to Columbia University where she became a professor of biology. In 1994 she was appointed professor and chair of the department of molecular biology and microbiology at Tufts University School of Medicine, serving until her retirement in 2007. She returned to California and completed her teaching and research career as a visiting professor at Stanford.

As an independent researcher, Squires was interested in how ribosomal RNAs were transcribed and in transcription antitermination, which occurs when a polymerase reads through what would ordinarily be recognized as a stop site. In one study, published in Cell in 1984, her lab identified "the antitermination system involved in E. coli ribosomal RNA transcription." She continued to work on ribosomal RNA operons and what controlled their transcription, expanding into an interest in why bacteria have so many rRNA operons. In the late 1990s she and colleagues that had no RNA operons and depended on plasmid-derived ribosomal RNA to survive. The strain enabled researchers to study bacterial evolution and horizontal gene transfer; Squires’ lab also used it to reorganize genes from an rRNA operon and demonstrate that transcription order was not very important for ribosome assembly.

In addition to more than 35 years as an ɬÀï·¬ member, Squires was a member of Sigma Xi, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Society for Microbiology. She served as editor-in-chief of the journal Microbiological Reviews.

Squires is survived by her husband of 55 years, Craig; brother, Thomas E. Kearney; sons and their spouses, Sean and Dorene, Ciaron and Juri; and her grandchildren, Caitlin and Aidan.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
ASBMB Today Staff

This article was written by a member or members of the ASBMB Today staff.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

ASBMB names 2026 award winners
Award

ASBMB names 2026 award winners

Sept. 5, 2025

Check out their lectures at the annual meeting in March in the Washington, D.C., metro area.

Peer through a window to the future of science
Annual Meeting

Peer through a window to the future of science

Sept. 3, 2025

Aaron Hoskins of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Sandra Gabelli of Merck, co-chairs of the 2026 ASBMB annual meeting, to be held March 7–10, explain how this gathering will inspire new ideas and drive progress in molecular life sciences.

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants
Member News

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants

Sept. 1, 2025

They will receive at least $1 million of funding to study the biological mechanisms that underly birds' longevity and sequence–function relationships of intrinsically disordered proteins.

How undergrad research catalyzes scientific careers
Essay

How undergrad research catalyzes scientific careers

Aug. 27, 2025

Undergraduate research doesn’t just teach lab skills, it transforms scientists. For Antonio Rivera and Julissa Cruz–Bautista, joining a lab became a turning point, fostering critical thinking, persistence and research identity.

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award
Member News

Simcox and Gisriel receive mentoring award

Aug. 25, 2025

They were honored for contributing their time, knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to mentoring postdocs in their labs.

ASBMB names 2025 Marion B. Sewer scholarship recipients
Society News

ASBMB names 2025 Marion B. Sewer scholarship recipients

Aug. 21, 2025

Ten undergraduates interested in biochemistry and molecular biology will each receive $2,000 toward their tuition and related educational costs.