Dennis Bray (born 1939)[2] is an active emeritus professor at University of Cambridge. His group is also part of the Oxford Centre for Integrative Systems Biology. After a first career in Neurobiology, working on cell growth and movement, Dennis Bray moved in Cambridge to develop computational models of cell signaling, in particular in relation to bacterial chemotaxis.
Essential Cell Biology (2003) (with Bruce Alberts, Karen Hopkin, Alexander Jonhson, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, Peter Walter) ISBN0-8153-3480-X, ISBN978-0-8153-3480-4
Essential Cell Biology: An Introduction to the Molecular Biology of the Cell (1997) (with Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, Peter Walter) ISBN0-8153-2971-7, ISBN978-0-8153-2971-8
Molecular Biology of the Cell (3rd ed, 1994) (with Bruce Alberts, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, James D. Watson) ISBN0-8153-1927-4, ISBN978-0-8153-1927-6
Molecular Biology of the Cell (1st ed, 1982) (with Bruce Alberts, Keith Roberts, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, James D Watson) ISBN0-8240-7283-9, ISBN978-0-8240-7283-4
Main scientific publications
Bray D (1970) Surface movements during growth of single explanted neurons. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA,
Bray D (1973) Model for Membrane Movements in the Neural Growth Cone. Nature, 244: 93 - 96
Bray D, White JG (1988) Cortical flow in animal cells. Science, 239: 883-888
Professor Franklin M. Harold writes "The theme [of a protein's shape and functionality being altered by interaction with its environment] comes with numerous variations, some of which are discussed in a thought-provoking article by Dennis Bray [author references Dr. Bray's 1995 article] that examines proteins as information-processing devices."[6]