As a pharmacy intern and then pharmacist, Dalton worked at
Kettering Medical Center. After earning his PhD, Dalton was appointed as assistant professor in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences at the
University of Tennessee. As a professor at the University of Tennessee, Dalton led the research group that first reported selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs;
enobosarm). In 1997, Dalton’s group published the first report on SARMs, which was used to research and create a class of potential drugs to treat age and disease-related muscle loss. Dalton also led the research group that invented
sabizabulin, a tubulin inhibitor under development for the treatment of cancer and SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19). From there, he was promoted to associate professor and moved to The Ohio State University (OSU) College of Pharmacy faculty. Dalton was eventually promoted to full professor and Chair of the Division of Pharmaceutics. The year following his fellowship election, Dalton left OSU to become Chief Scientific Officer at
GTx Incorporated. Dalton left GTx in 2014 to become the Dean of Pharmaceutical Sciences at the
University of Michigan. In 2019, Dalton was one of three UMich faculty members elected to
National Academy of Medicine. In 2020, Dalton was appointed Executive Vice President & Provost at the
University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. In 2025, Dalton was appointed Executive Vice President of the
LSU System & Chancellor of
Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. == References ==