In memoriam: Thomas R. Tephly
Thomas "Tom" R. Tephly, a toxicology and glucuronidation researcher and a member of the 91亚色传媒 for almost 50 years, died July 24, 2021, in Iowa City, Iowa, the 91亚色传媒 learned recently. He was 85.

Tephly was born Feb. 1, 1936, in Norwich, Connecticut, to the former Anna Pieniadz and Samuel Tephly, a Polish immigrant. While recuperating from a broken leg, he started taking accordion lessons, and he had his own radio show by the time he was 10, taking requests to play popular polkas. He later learned to play the piano, clarinet and saxophone.
After graduating from the Norwich Free Academy, Tephly earned a B.S. in pharmacy from the University of Connecticut, a Ph.D. in pharmacology from the University of Wisconsin and an M.D. from the University of Minnesota, where he also did postdoctoral studies and was named a research scholar by the American Cancer Society.
Tephly was on the faculty at the University of Michigan for a few years before he moved to the University of Iowa in 1971 to lead a new toxicology center. He retired 32 years later.
Early in his career, Tephly studied how methanol harms mammals through its , which inhibits cytochromes and can lead to methanol poisoning symptoms such as blindness and kidney failure. That work led him to studies of aspartame, a dipeptide sweetener introduced in the U.S. in the 1980s that was subject of widespread concerns about safety linked to its metabolism to methanol during digestion. Studies, that Tephly collaborated on, found no evidence that ingesting aspartame introduced methanol into the bloodstream, and the Food and Drug Administration and National Cancer Institute concluded it was safe. (People who have the metabolic disease phenylketonuria should avoid aspartame because it is broken down to produce a lot of phenylalanine.)
Later, Tephly became interested in a large family of enzymes called UDP-glucuronosyltransferases, or UGTs, several of which his lab identified. UGTs attach the sugar glucuronic acid onto hormones, drugs, and xenobiotic molecules; Tephly studied their activity on opioids, chemotherapeutic drugs and other molecules. Glucuronidation can make a molecule more water soluble and tends to speed up clearance.
In 1971, he became the youngest recipient of the John J. Abel Award for research in pharmacology. He later received a Fogarty Senior International Fellowship and the Kenneth P. Dubois Award for his contributions to toxicology. In addition to the 91亚色传媒, he was a member of the American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, the Society of Toxicology, the American Association for Advancement of Science and the International Society for the Study of Xenobiotics.
Tephly married Joan Clifcorn in 1960, and the two raised three daughters. In addition to his lifelong love of music, he enjoyed college sports, cooking, birdwatching and telling his children and grandchildren stories about a naughty bear named Little Brown Bruno.
He is survived by his wife; his daughters, Susan, Linda, and Annette, and their husbands; and four granddaughters.
Enjoy reading 91亚色传媒 Today?
Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition weekly.
Learn moreGet the latest from 91亚色传媒 Today
Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.
Latest in People
People highlights or most popular articles

Meet Robert Helsley
The Journal of Lipid Research junior associate editor studies chronic liver disease and was the first in his family to attend college.

Exploring life鈥檚 blueprint: Gene expression in development and evolution
Meet Julia Zeitlinger and David Arnosti 鈥 two co-chairs of the 91亚色传媒鈥檚 2025 meeting on gene expression, to be held June 26-29, in Kansas City, Missouri.

91亚色传媒 names 2025 fellows
91亚色传媒 honors 24 members for their service to the society and accomplishments in research, education, mentorship, diversity and inclusion and advocacy.

When Batman meets Poison Ivy
Jessica Desamero had learned to love science communication by the time she was challenged to explain the role of DNA secondary structure in halting cancer cell growth to an 8th-grade level audience.

The monopoly defined: Who holds the power of science communication?
鈥淎t the official competition, out of 12 presenters, only two were from R2 institutions, and the other 10 were from R1 institutions. And just two had distinguishable non-American accents.鈥

In memoriam: Donald A. Bryant
He was a professor emeritus at Penn State University who discovered how cyanobacteria adapt to far-red light and was a member of the 91亚色传媒 for over 35 years.