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George Beadle

George Wells Beadle (October 22, 1903 – June 9, 1989) was an American geneticist. In 1958 he shared one-half of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Edward Tatum for their discovery of the role of genes in regulating biochemical events within cells.[3][4] He also served as the 7th President of the University of Chicago.[5]

George Beadle

Born
George Wells Beadle

(1903-10-22)October 22, 1903[2]
DiedJune 9, 1989(1989-06-09) (aged 85)
Alma materUniversity of Nebraska (BS)
Cornell University (MS, PhD)
Known for
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsGenetics
Institutions
ThesisGenetical and Cytological Studies of Mendelian Asynapsis in Zea mays (1930)
Doctoral advisor
Other academic advisors
Doctoral students
Other notable students

Beadle and Tatum's key experiments involved exposing the bread mold Neurospora crassa to x-rays, causing mutations. In a series of experiments, they showed that these mutations caused changes in specific enzymes involved in metabolic pathways. These experiments led them to propose a direct link between genes and enzymatic reactions, known as the One gene-one enzyme hypothesis.[6][7][8]

Education and early life Edit

George Wells Beadle was born in Wahoo, Nebraska. He was the son of Chauncey Elmer Beadle and Hattie Albro, who owned and operated a 40-acre (160,000 m2) farm nearby.[9] George was educated at the Wahoo High School and might himself have become a farmer if one of his teachers at school had not directed his mind towards science and persuaded him to go to the College of Agriculture in Lincoln, Nebraska. In 1926 he earned his Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Nebraska and subsequently worked for a year with Professor F.D. Keim, who was studying hybrid wheat. In 1927 he earned his Master of Science degree, and Professor Keim secured for him a post as Teaching Assistant at Cornell University, where he worked, until 1931, with Professors R.A. Emerson and L.W. Sharp on Mendelian asynapsis in Zea mays.[10] For this work he obtained, in 1931, his Doctor of Philosophy degree.[10]

Career and research Edit

In 1931 Fellowship at the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena, where he remained from 1931 until 1936. During this period he continued his work on Indian corn and began, in collaboration with Professors Theodosius Dobzhansky, S. Emerson, and Alfred Sturtevant, work on crossing-over in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster.[citation needed]

In 1935 Beadle visited Paris for six months to work with Professor Boris Ephrussi at the Institut de Biologie physico-chimique. Together they began the study of the development of eye pigment in Drosophila which later led to the work on the biochemistry of the genetics of the fungus Neurospora for which Beadle and Edward Lawrie Tatum were together awarded the 1958 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

In 1936 Beadle left the California Institute of Technology to become Assistant Professor of Genetics at Harvard University. A year later he was appointed Professor of Biology (Genetics) at Stanford University and there he remained for nine years, working for most of this period in collaboration with Tatum. This work of Beadle and Tatum led to an important generalization. This was that most mutants unable to grow on minimal medium, but able to grow on “complete” medium, each require addition of only one particular supplement for growth on minimal medium. If the synthesis of a particular nutrient (such as an amino acid or vitamin) was disrupted by mutation, that mutant strain could be grown by adding the necessary nutrient to the minimal medium.[11] This finding suggested that most mutations affected only a single metabolic pathway. Further evidence obtained soon after the initial findings tended to show that generally only a single step in the pathway is blocked. Following their first report of three such auxotroph mutants in 1941, Beadle and Tatum used this method to create series of related mutants and determined the order in which amino acids and some other metabolites were synthesized in several metabolic pathways. The obvious inference from these experiments was that each gene mutation affects the activity of a single enzyme. This led directly to the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis, which, with certain qualifications and refinements, has remained essentially valid to the present day. As recalled by Horowitz,[12] the work of Beadle and Tatum also demonstrated that genes have an essential role in biosynthesis. At the time of the experiments (1941), non-geneticists still generally believed that genes governed only trivial biological traits, such as eye color, and bristle arrangement in fruit flies, while basic biochemistry was determined in the cytoplasm by unknown processes. Also, many respected geneticists thought that gene action was far too complicated to be resolved by any simple experiment. Thus Beadle and Tatum brought about a fundamental revolution in our understanding of genetics.

In 1946 Beadle returned to the California Institute of Technology as Professor of Biology and Chairman of the Division of Biology. Here he remained until January 1961 when he was elected Chancellor of the University of Chicago and, in the autumn of the same year, President of this University.

After retiring, Beadle undertook a remarkable experiment in maize genetics. In several laboratories he grew a series of Teosinte/Maize crosses. Then he crossed these progeny with each other. He looked for the rate of appearance of parent phenotypes among this second generation. The vast majority of these plants were intermediate between maize and Teosinte in their features, but about 1 in 500 of the plants were identical to either the parent maize or the parent teosinte. Using the mathematics of Mendelian genetics, he calculated that this showed a difference between maize and teosinte of about 5 or 6 genetic loci. This demonstration was so compelling that most scientists now agree that Teosinte is the wild progenitor of maize.[13][14]

During his career, Beadle has received many honors. These include the Honorary Doctor of Science of the following Universities: Yale (1947), Nebraska (1949), Northwestern University (1952), Rutgers University (1954), Kenyon College (1955), Wesleyan University (1956), the University of Birmingham and the University of Oxford, England (1959), Pomona College (1961), and Lake Forest College (1962). In 1962 he was also given the honorary degree of LL.D. by the University of California, Los Angeles. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1946.[15] He also received the Lasker Award of the American Public Health Association (1950), the Dyer Award (1951), the Emil Christian Hansen Prize of Denmark (1953), the Albert Einstein Commemorative Award in Science (1958), the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1958 with Edward Tatum and Joshua Lederberg, the National Award of the American Cancer Society (1959), and the Kimber Genetics Award of the National Academy of Sciences (1960).

Awards and honors Edit

In addition to the Nobel Prize, Beadle received numerous other awards. Beadle was a member of several learned societies, he was a Member of the National Academy of Sciences[16] (and Chairman of Committee on Genetic Effects of Atomic Radiation), the Genetics Society of America (President in 1946), the American Association for the Advancement of Science (President in 1955), the American Cancer Society (Chairman of Scientific Advisory Council), a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) of London,[2] the Danish Royal Academy of Science and the American Philosophical Society.[17]

The George W. Beadle Award of the Genetics Society of America is named in his honor. George Beadle Middle School in Millard, Nebraska (Part of the Millard Public Schools district) was named after him. It opened in 2001. The Beadle Center, which houses the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, is also named after George Beadle.

Personal life Edit

Beadle was married twice. By his first wife he had a son, David, who now lives at The Hague, the Netherlands.[citation needed] His second wife, Muriel McClure (1915-1994), a well-known writer, was born in California. Beadle's chief hobbies were rockclimbing, skiing, and gardening. He was a member of FarmHouse fraternity while at the University of Nebraska.[citation needed]

Beadle died on June 9, 1989. He was an atheist.[18]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d "DevTree - George Wells Beadle". academictree.org.
  2. ^ a b Horowitz, Norman H. (1995). "George Wells Beadle. 23 October 1903-9 June 1989". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. Royal Society. 41: 44–54. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1995.0003. PMID 11615361.
  3. ^ George W. Beadle — Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences
  4. ^ Stern, C. (1954). "George W. Beadle". Science. 119 (3086): 229–230. Bibcode:1954Sci...119..229S. doi:10.1126/science.119.3086.229. PMID 13135519.
  5. ^ "George W. Beadle | Office of the President | The University of Chicago". president.uchicago.edu. 12 June 2012. Retrieved 2019-06-22.
  6. ^ Beadle, G. W.; Tatum, E. L. (1941). "Genetic Control of Biochemical Reactions in Neurospora" (PDF). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 27 (11): 499–506. Bibcode:1941PNAS...27..499B. doi:10.1073/pnas.27.11.499. PMC 1078370. PMID 16588492.
  7. ^ Paul Berg and Maxine Singer. George Beadle: An Uncommon Farmer. The Emergence of Genetics in the 20th Century. Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory Press, 2003. ISBN 0-87969-688-5
  8. ^ Key Participants: George Beadle - It's in the Blood! A Documentary History of Linus Pauling, Hemoglobin, and Sickle Cell Anemia
  9. ^ Beadle, G. W. (1974). "Recollections". Annual Review of Biochemistry. 43: 1–13. doi:10.1146/annurev.bi.43.070174.000245. PMID 4605017.
  10. ^ a b Beadle, George Wells (1930). Genetical and Cytological Studies of Mendelian Asynapsis in Zea mays (PhD thesis). Cornell University.
  11. ^ Beadle, G. W. (1966) "Biochemical genetics: some recollections", pp. 23-32 in Phage and the Origins of Molecular Biology, edited by J. Cairns, G. S. Stent and J. D. Watson. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of Quantitative Biology, NY. ASIN: B005F08IQ8
  12. ^ Horowitz NH (May, 1996). "The sixtieth anniversary of biochemical genetics". Genetics. 143 (1): 1-4. doi:10.1093/genetics/143.1.1.PMC 1207243. PMID 8722756
  13. ^ Beadle, G. W. (1980). "The ancestry of corn". Scientific American. 242 (1): 112–119. Bibcode:1980SciAm.242a.112B. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0180-112.
  14. ^ Beadle, George. "The Ancestry of Corn" (PDF). Retrieved 2 July 2014.
  15. ^ "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  16. ^ "G. Beadle". Nasonline.org. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  17. ^ "APS Member History". Search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2019-04-07.
  18. ^ George Beadle, An Uncommon Farmer: The Emergence of Genetics in the 20th Century. CSHL Press. 2003. p. 273. ISBN 9780879696887. Beadle's views on this occasion were somewhat more tempered than David's characterization of him as a "vehement atheist," and from his earliest days "intolerant of religion and other forms of superstition."

External links Edit

  • Guide to the George Wells Beadle Papers 1908-1981 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center
  • Guide to the University of Chicago Office of the President, Beadle Administration Records 1916-1968 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center
  • George Beadle on Nobelprize.org  
Academic offices
Preceded by President of the University of Chicago
1961–1968
Succeeded by

george, beadle, zealand, rugby, league, international, rugby, league, george, wells, beadle, october, 1903, june, 1989, american, geneticist, 1958, shared, half, nobel, prize, physiology, medicine, with, edward, tatum, their, discovery, role, genes, regulating. For New Zealand rugby league international see George Beadle rugby league George Wells Beadle October 22 1903 June 9 1989 was an American geneticist In 1958 he shared one half of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Edward Tatum for their discovery of the role of genes in regulating biochemical events within cells 3 4 He also served as the 7th President of the University of Chicago 5 George BeadleForMemRSBornGeorge Wells Beadle 1903 10 22 October 22 1903 2 Wahoo Nebraska U S DiedJune 9 1989 1989 06 09 aged 85 Pomona California U S Alma materUniversity of Nebraska BS Cornell University MS PhD Known forOne gene one enzyme hypothesisGene regulation of biochemical events within cellsAwardsMember of the National Academy of Sciences 1944 Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research 1950 Mendel Medal 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1958 Foreign Member of the Royal Society 1960 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal 1984 Scientific careerFieldsGeneticsInstitutionsCalifornia Institute of TechnologyUniversity of ChicagoHarvard UniversityStanford UniversityThesisGenetical and Cytological Studies of Mendelian Asynapsis in Zea mays 1930 Doctoral advisorRollins A Emerson Lester W Sharp 1 Other academic advisorsFranklin D Keim 1 Thomas Hunt Morgan post doc 1 Doctoral studentsRobert Metzenberg 1 Other notable studentsNorman Horowitz post doc Herschel K Mitchell post doc William D McElroy post doc Clement Markert post doc Beadle and Tatum s key experiments involved exposing the bread mold Neurospora crassa to x rays causing mutations In a series of experiments they showed that these mutations caused changes in specific enzymes involved in metabolic pathways These experiments led them to propose a direct link between genes and enzymatic reactions known as the One gene one enzyme hypothesis 6 7 8 Contents 1 Education and early life 2 Career and research 2 1 Awards and honors 3 Personal life 4 References 5 External linksEducation and early life EditGeorge Wells Beadle was born in Wahoo Nebraska He was the son of Chauncey Elmer Beadle and Hattie Albro who owned and operated a 40 acre 160 000 m2 farm nearby 9 George was educated at the Wahoo High School and might himself have become a farmer if one of his teachers at school had not directed his mind towards science and persuaded him to go to the College of Agriculture in Lincoln Nebraska In 1926 he earned his Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Nebraska and subsequently worked for a year with Professor F D Keim who was studying hybrid wheat In 1927 he earned his Master of Science degree and Professor Keim secured for him a post as Teaching Assistant at Cornell University where he worked until 1931 with Professors R A Emerson and L W Sharp on Mendelian asynapsis in Zea mays 10 For this work he obtained in 1931 his Doctor of Philosophy degree 10 Career and research EditIn 1931 Fellowship at the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena where he remained from 1931 until 1936 During this period he continued his work on Indian corn and began in collaboration with Professors Theodosius Dobzhansky S Emerson and Alfred Sturtevant work on crossing over in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster citation needed In 1935 Beadle visited Paris for six months to work with Professor Boris Ephrussi at the Institut de Biologie physico chimique Together they began the study of the development of eye pigment in Drosophila which later led to the work on the biochemistry of the genetics of the fungus Neurospora for which Beadle and Edward Lawrie Tatum were together awarded the 1958 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine In 1936 Beadle left the California Institute of Technology to become Assistant Professor of Genetics at Harvard University A year later he was appointed Professor of Biology Genetics at Stanford University and there he remained for nine years working for most of this period in collaboration with Tatum This work of Beadle and Tatum led to an important generalization This was that most mutants unable to grow on minimal medium but able to grow on complete medium each require addition of only one particular supplement for growth on minimal medium If the synthesis of a particular nutrient such as an amino acid or vitamin was disrupted by mutation that mutant strain could be grown by adding the necessary nutrient to the minimal medium 11 This finding suggested that most mutations affected only a single metabolic pathway Further evidence obtained soon after the initial findings tended to show that generally only a single step in the pathway is blocked Following their first report of three such auxotroph mutants in 1941 Beadle and Tatum used this method to create series of related mutants and determined the order in which amino acids and some other metabolites were synthesized in several metabolic pathways The obvious inference from these experiments was that each gene mutation affects the activity of a single enzyme This led directly to the one gene one enzyme hypothesis which with certain qualifications and refinements has remained essentially valid to the present day As recalled by Horowitz 12 the work of Beadle and Tatum also demonstrated that genes have an essential role in biosynthesis At the time of the experiments 1941 non geneticists still generally believed that genes governed only trivial biological traits such as eye color and bristle arrangement in fruit flies while basic biochemistry was determined in the cytoplasm by unknown processes Also many respected geneticists thought that gene action was far too complicated to be resolved by any simple experiment Thus Beadle and Tatum brought about a fundamental revolution in our understanding of genetics In 1946 Beadle returned to the California Institute of Technology as Professor of Biology and Chairman of the Division of Biology Here he remained until January 1961 when he was elected Chancellor of the University of Chicago and in the autumn of the same year President of this University After retiring Beadle undertook a remarkable experiment in maize genetics In several laboratories he grew a series of Teosinte Maize crosses Then he crossed these progeny with each other He looked for the rate of appearance of parent phenotypes among this second generation The vast majority of these plants were intermediate between maize and Teosinte in their features but about 1 in 500 of the plants were identical to either the parent maize or the parent teosinte Using the mathematics of Mendelian genetics he calculated that this showed a difference between maize and teosinte of about 5 or 6 genetic loci This demonstration was so compelling that most scientists now agree that Teosinte is the wild progenitor of maize 13 14 During his career Beadle has received many honors These include the Honorary Doctor of Science of the following Universities Yale 1947 Nebraska 1949 Northwestern University 1952 Rutgers University 1954 Kenyon College 1955 Wesleyan University 1956 the University of Birmingham and the University of Oxford England 1959 Pomona College 1961 and Lake Forest College 1962 In 1962 he was also given the honorary degree of LL D by the University of California Los Angeles He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1946 15 He also received the Lasker Award of the American Public Health Association 1950 the Dyer Award 1951 the Emil Christian Hansen Prize of Denmark 1953 the Albert Einstein Commemorative Award in Science 1958 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1958 with Edward Tatum and Joshua Lederberg the National Award of the American Cancer Society 1959 and the Kimber Genetics Award of the National Academy of Sciences 1960 Awards and honors Edit In addition to the Nobel Prize Beadle received numerous other awards Beadle was a member of several learned societies he was a Member of the National Academy of Sciences 16 and Chairman of Committee on Genetic Effects of Atomic Radiation the Genetics Society of America President in 1946 the American Association for the Advancement of Science President in 1955 the American Cancer Society Chairman of Scientific Advisory Council a Foreign Member of the Royal Society ForMemRS of London 2 the Danish Royal Academy of Science and the American Philosophical Society 17 The George W Beadle Award of the Genetics Society of America is named in his honor George Beadle Middle School in Millard Nebraska Part of the Millard Public Schools district was named after him It opened in 2001 The Beadle Center which houses the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Nebraska Lincoln is also named after George Beadle Personal life EditBeadle was married twice By his first wife he had a son David who now lives at The Hague the Netherlands citation needed His second wife Muriel McClure 1915 1994 a well known writer was born in California Beadle s chief hobbies were rockclimbing skiing and gardening He was a member of FarmHouse fraternity while at the University of Nebraska citation needed Beadle died on June 9 1989 He was an atheist 18 References Edit a b c d DevTree George Wells Beadle academictree org a b Horowitz Norman H 1995 George Wells Beadle 23 October 1903 9 June 1989 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society Royal Society 41 44 54 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1995 0003 PMID 11615361 George W Beadle Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences Stern C 1954 George W Beadle Science 119 3086 229 230 Bibcode 1954Sci 119 229S doi 10 1126 science 119 3086 229 PMID 13135519 George W Beadle Office of the President The University of Chicago president uchicago edu 12 June 2012 Retrieved 2019 06 22 Beadle G W Tatum E L 1941 Genetic Control of Biochemical Reactions in Neurospora PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 27 11 499 506 Bibcode 1941PNAS 27 499B doi 10 1073 pnas 27 11 499 PMC 1078370 PMID 16588492 Paul Berg and Maxine Singer George Beadle An Uncommon Farmer The Emergence of Genetics in the 20th Century Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory Press 2003 ISBN 0 87969 688 5 Key Participants George Beadle It s in the Blood A Documentary History of Linus Pauling Hemoglobin and Sickle Cell Anemia Beadle G W 1974 Recollections Annual Review of Biochemistry 43 1 13 doi 10 1146 annurev bi 43 070174 000245 PMID 4605017 a b Beadle George Wells 1930 Genetical and Cytological Studies of Mendelian Asynapsis in Zea mays PhD thesis Cornell University Beadle G W 1966 Biochemical genetics some recollections pp 23 32 in Phage and the Origins of Molecular Biology edited by J Cairns G S Stent and J D Watson Cold Spring Harbor Symposia Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of Quantitative Biology NY ASIN B005F08IQ8 Horowitz NH May 1996 The sixtieth anniversary of biochemical genetics Genetics 143 1 1 4 doi 10 1093 genetics 143 1 1 PMC 1207243 PMID 8722756 Beadle G W 1980 The ancestry of corn Scientific American 242 1 112 119 Bibcode 1980SciAm 242a 112B doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0180 112 Beadle George The Ancestry of Corn PDF Retrieved 2 July 2014 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved May 28 2011 G Beadle Nasonline org Retrieved 29 April 2019 APS Member History Search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2019 04 07 George Beadle An Uncommon Farmer The Emergence of Genetics in the 20th Century CSHL Press 2003 p 273 ISBN 9780879696887 Beadle s views on this occasion were somewhat more tempered than David s characterization of him as a vehement atheist and from his earliest days intolerant of religion and other forms of superstition External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to George Beadle Guide to the George Wells Beadle Papers 1908 1981 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Guide to the University of Chicago Office of the President Beadle Administration Records 1916 1968 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center George Beadle on Nobelprize org nbsp Academic officesPreceded byLawrence A Kimpton President of the University of Chicago1961 1968 Succeeded byEdward H Levi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Beadle amp oldid 1166813608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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