Mary Osborn (born in 1940)[4] is a L'Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science Award-winning English cell biologist who, until she stopped running an active laboratory in 2005,[5] was on the scientific staff at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany.[5] Osborn established two techniques frequently used by cell biologists. She pioneered both molecular weight determination of proteins using SDS PAGE[6] and immunofluorescence microscopy.[7] Osborn also used the immunofluorescence microscopy method to work out the details of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton. Small differences in the intermediate filament constituents helped her distinguish differentiated cells from each other.[8] She also found intermediate filament immunofluorescence differences between normal versus cancer cells.[8] Mary Osborn has been a prominent spokesperson for women in science.[9]
^F. M. Watt. (2004) "Mary Osborn" Journal of Cell Science117(8):1255-1256.
^ abOsborn, Mary (2018). "Mary Osborn". Goettingen Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry.
^Klaus Weber and Mary Osborn. (1969) "The Reliability of Molecular Weight Determinations by Dodecyl Sulfate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis" Journal of Biological Chemistry213 (16): 4406-4412.
^Mary Osborn, Werner Franke, and Klaus Weber, (1977) "Visualization of a system of filaments 7-10nm thick in cultured cells of an epithelioid line (Pt K2) by immunofluorescence microscopy" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences74 (6):2490-2494.
^ ab"Genome Biology: Women in Science." (2012) Genome Biology13: 148-154. doi:10.1186/gb-2012-13-3-148.
^Silvia Sanides. (2004) "Cell Biologist Multitasks for Women" The Scientist, March 15.