President's Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, California State University, Los Angeles
Areas of Interest:
chemistry, education
Carlos G. Gutiérrez is the President's Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at
California State University Los Angeles. He is a synthetic organic chemist, with interests at the
interface of organic, inorganic and biological chemistry. Currently, he and his students design and
synthesize molecular species useful as probes to study the details of iron acquisition, transport,
and utilization by bacteria.
Along with colleagues, he has provided many opportunities for Cal State LA
science students to experience career enhancement through intense participation in research projects
directed by faculty mentors. He has participated in obtaining $35 million in research and research
training grants over the past 25 years to support the activities of students in his research group
and also 25 other laboratories on campus. He has directed the Cal State LA Minority Access to
Research Careers (MARC) program since 1978 and the Minority Biomedical Research Support (MBRS)
program since 1992. He is very proud of the achievements of the many Cal State LA MARC and MBRS
students who have participated in these programs.
Gutiérrez has served on several standing and ad hoc peer review committees of the
National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. In 1995, he was appointed to
serve on the National Advisory Council to the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, NIH.
He has served on the National Research Council's Advisory Committee to the Office of Scientific and
Engineering Personnel, and is currently a member of its Board on Higher Education Workforce. He is a
member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Committee on Opportunities in
Science, the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation Undergraduate Scholars Grant Advisory Panel, the
Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Grant Advisory Committee, the American Chemical Society (ACS)
Committee on Professional Training, and the ACS Committee on Minority Affairs.
Significant honors to Gutiérrez include an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences Award in animation in 1973 for the film "Antimatter" that he and Lewis Hall made as
undergraduates, and which combined his interest in art and science. He received the Cal State LA
Outstanding Professor Award in 1984, and the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi Distinguished Scholar
Award in 1985. Gutierrez was among the first honored by President Clinton through a Presidential
Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring, at a White House ceremony in
1996. The following year, he received the Anthony J. Andreoli Biotechnology Service Research Award
from the California State University Program for Education and Research in Biotechnology. In 2000,
he was named a "Giant In Science" by the Quality Education for Minorities Network, and received the
23-campus California State University System Wang Family Excellence - Outstanding Faculty in the
Natural Sciences Award. More recently, he received the 2001 American Chemical Society Award for
Encouraging Disadvantaged Students into Careers in the Chemical Sciences; was named a National
Associate of the National Research Council and the National Academy of Sciences, 2001; and was
inducted as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002. He is
particularly proud of the "Honored Faculty Award" given him by the Associated Students of California
State University, Los Angeles in 1996.
He holds a B.S. degree in chemistry from UCLA (1971) and a Ph.D. in synthetic
organic chemistry from the University of California, Davis (1975) for work with Professor R. Bryan
Miller on the preparation of the Himachalene family of sesquiterpenes.
He served as a CCST Council Member from 2003-2008.
Updated 1/15/09
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Senior Fellows Roster
Agnew, Harold M.
Ames, Bruce
Atkinson, Richard C.
Axler, Sheldon
Ayala, Francisco
Bainton, Dorothy
Baltimore, David
Balzhiser, Richard
Bell, C. Gordon
Bennett, Alan B.
Bienenstock, Arthur
Berman, Francine
Biller, Robert
Birnbaum, Joel
Bishop, J. Michael
Byer, Robert
Cárdenas. Alfonso F.
Caren, Robert
Caulder, Jerry
Chester, Arthur
Chu, Steven
Cicerone, Ralph
Clegg, Michael T.
Cohen, Linda
Coleman, Lawrence
Cominsky, Lynn R.
Conger, Harry
Coye, Molly Joel
Darby, Michael
Day, Thomas
Diener, Octavia
Dorfman, Steven
Drake, Michael V.
Drell, Sidney
Dynes, Robert
Elster, Richard S.
Everhart, Thomas
Faber, Sandra
Foster, John
Fowler, T. Kenneth
Frieman, Edward
Geballe, Theodore
Goldberger, Marvin
Golub, Sidney
Goodstein, David
Graham, Susan
Gray, Harry
Grey, Robert
Gurol, Mirat D.
Gutiérrez, Carlos
Harper, Charles
Hennessy, John
Hockaday, Stephen
Hodges, David
Huang, Alice S.
Hubbard, G. Scott
Hullar, Theodore
Jacobs, Irwin
Jennings, Paul
Judd, Lewis
Kennedy, Robert
Kennel, Charles
Kerschner, Lee
King, C. Judson
Koonin, Steven
Lee, William C.Y.
Lemke, James
Levine, Mark
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Livanos, Alexis
Long, Jane C. S.
MacCalla, Johnetta
McCarty, Perry
McGaugh, James
McLean, William J.
McMurtry, Burton
McTague, John P.
Meyer, Jarold
Meyyappan, Meyya
Miller, William F.
Moline, Mark
Moorhouse, Douglas
Moses, Edward I.
Murray, Cherry
Nacht, Michael
Narayanamurti, Venkatesh
Niebla, J.
Nikias, C.L. Max
Noll, Roger
Nova, Tina S.
Okrent, David
Papay, Lawrence
Paté-Cornell, M.
Patel, C. Kumar
Pea, Roy
Peltason, Jack
Penhoet, Edward
Penzien, Joseph
Pooley, James
Rao, Ramesh
Richmond, Rollin C.
Richter, Burton
Riggs, Henry
Rockwood, Stephen
Rosser, James
Rowland, F. Sherwood
Rutter, William
Ryan, Stephen A.
Savitz, Maxine
Scalise, George
Seinfeld, John
Shank, Charles
Shapiro, Lucy
Shelton, Robert
Slaughter, John
Stone, Edward
Sullivan, Cornelius
Suzuki, Bob
Sweeney, James
Syvertson, Clarence
Tanner, R. Michael
Tarter, C. Bruce
Tinoco, Ignacio
Toy, Larry
Varian, Hal
Weeks, John
Weinberg, Carl
Wertheim, Robert
Wilson, John
Wyllie, Loring
Yang, Henry
Zare, Richard
Zarem, Abe
Zschau, Ed
Zucker, Lynne
Zysman, John
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