Genetic Engineers
Genetic engineering, simply defined, is the study that involves the direct manipulation of an organism’s genome by the use of biotechnology.
Genetic engineers and doctors make use of technologies to change the genetic makeup of cells, which includes transferring of genes across different species to produce improved or new organisms.
Techniques created in the field of genetic engineering have been used in different fields which include research, agriculture, industrial biotechnology as well as medicine.
Here is a list of some of the pioneers in the field of genetic engineering.
Frederick Miescher
Frederick Miescher, a Swiss chemist, discovered DNA. He was able to discover genetic material while studying white blood cells in pus-ridden bandages.
Johann Gregor Mendel
Thanks to Gregor Mendel—and his pea plants—he was able to discover the fundamental laws if inheritance. He recognized that there are dominant and recessive particles in the plants, which we now know as dominant and recessive genes. With this, he gained the name ‘Father of Genetics’.
Francis Crick
Francis Harry Compton Crick OM FRS was a British molecular biologist, biophysicist, and neuroscientist. He is known for being a co-discoverer of the structure of the DNA molecule in the year 1953. He is also known for his many other major contributions in the sciences.
James Watson
James Watson, an American molecular biologist, geneticist and zoologist. He is the co-discoverer of the DNA’s structure along with Francis Crick. Watson, Crick and Maurice Wilkins were awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for “their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material”.
Frederick Sanger
Frederick Sanger is a chemist who has won two Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. He was able to work out the complete amino acid sequence of insulin and he was also able to device techniques to sequence DNA, since he believed that sequencing is a key to understanding living matter.
Marshall Warren Nirenberg
Marshall Warren Nirenberg, an American biochemist and geneticist, is known for “cracking the genetic code” and describing how it operates in protein synthesis. This got him to share a Nobel Prize in Physiology of Medicine in 1968 with Har Gobind Khorana and Robert W. Holley.
Paul Berg
Paul Berg is an American biochemist and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He assembled the first DNA molecules that combines genes that came from different organisms. The results of his experiments were published, which was an important step in the continuous development of recombinant genetic engineering.
George Emil Palade
George Emil Palade was a Romanian cell biologist who discovered ribosomes in the mid-1950s. Palade used an electron microscope to observe these dense particles or granules. The term “ribosome” was proposed by scientist Richard B. Roberts in 1958.
Oswald Avery
Oswald Avery is a Canadian-born American physician and medical researcher who is known for his discovery that DNA is the hereditary material.
Hans Spemann
Hans Spemann is a German embryologist who discovered how groups of embryonic cells can develop into different tissues and organs. He was also able to perform the first somatic nuclear transfer, which is the technique used to clone animals.
Craig Venter
John Craig Venter, an American biotechnologist, biochemist, geneticist, and entrepreneur, is known for being one of the first to sequence human genomes. He is also one of the first to transfect a cell with a synthetic genome.
Herb Boyer and Stanley Cohen
These remarkable genetic engineers created the first ever genetically engineered organism, which started the field of genetic engineering.
Sir Alec Jeffreys
Sir Alec Jeffreys is a geneticist and a professor who developed techniques for DNA fingerprinting and DNA profiling, which are popularly used worldwide in forensic science to help in police detective work as well as to solve paternity and immigration disputes. In 1994, he was knighted because of his services to genetics.
Phoebus Levene
Phoebus Levene is a Russian-American biochemist who discovered that the cell nucleus contains both DNA and RNA.
Genetic Engineers