John N. Reeve

John Newton Reeve is an American microbiologist who was the Department Chair of microbiology at Ohio State University, where he was Rod Sharp Professor of Microbiology.

He undertook Postdoctoral appointments at University of Arizona, 1971–1973 and at the Max Planck Institute, W. Berlin, 1974–1979.

[1] He is well known as the discoverer of archaea histones, small DNA-binding proteins which are the precursors of histones in eukaryotes, as evidenced by his many published articles.

[2] He won a LExEN Award for his work "Longevity and Diversity of Microorganisms Entrapped in Tropical and Polar Ice Cores".

This article about a biologist from the United States is a stub.