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Ranajit Chakraborty

Ranajit Chakraborty (April 17, 1946 – September 23, 2018) was a human and population geneticist.[1] At the time of his death, he was Director of the Center for Computational Genomics at the Institute of Applied Genetics and Professor in the Department of Forensic and Investigative Genetics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth, Texas.[1] His scientific contributions include studies in human genetics, population genetics, genetic epidemiology, statistical genetics, and forensic genetics.

Ranajit Chakraborty
Chakraborty, ca. 2008
Born
Ranajit Chakraborty

(1946-04-17)April 17, 1946
DiedSeptember 23, 2018(2018-09-23) (aged 72)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materIndian Statistical Institute
SpouseDr. Bandana M. Chakraborty
Scientific career
FieldsHuman genetics
Population genetics
Forensic genetics
InstitutionsThe University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
University of Cincinnati
University of North Texas
Doctoral advisorC. R. Rao
Doctoral studentsJill S. Barnholtz-Sloan

Early life and education edit

Ranajit Chakraborty was born in Baranagore (West Bengal), India. At his graduation from high school in 1963, he was awarded First Class with Distinction Certificate from the Board of Secondary Education of West Bengal. In 1967, got his Bachelor of Statistics degree (with honors) from the Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta, and a year later was awarded a Master of Statistics (with specialization in Mathematical Genetics and Advanced Probability). In 1971, he got his Ph.D. in Biostatistics from the Indian Statistical Institute.[1] His dissertation supervisor was C. R. Rao, FRS. Before obtaining his first tenure-track academic position, Chakraborty served as Research Scholar and Senior Research Fellow at the Indian Statistical Institute, Visiting Lecturer of Statistics at the Indian Institute of Management, and Visiting Consultant at the Data Reference Center of the World Health Organization at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu.

Academic career edit

In 1973, Chakraborty joined the faculty at the Center for Demographic and Population Genetics, which is now the Human Genetics Center, at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. From 1996 to 2001, he held the Allan King Professorship at the School of Public Health. In 2001, he became the Robert A. Kehoe Professor and Director of the Center for Genome Information at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. In 2009, Chakraborty joined the Department of Forensic and Investigative Genetics, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, Texas.

In addition to his main academic appointments, throughout his career, Chakraborty served in various capacities on the faculties of University of Houston, Stanford University, University of Stockholm, University of Michigan, Rice University, and Universidad de Chile.

Scientific contributions edit

Ranajit Chakraborty wrote six books and over 600 scientific articles.[2][3][4] Three of these became citation classics.[5]

Chakraborty's research contributions were in three main areas. During the first phase of his professional career, he contributed to the development of population genetics and molecular evolution. In collaboration with Masatoshi Nei, Takeo Maruyama, and Paul Fuerst, he studied among others the effects of bottlenecks on genetic variability,[3] the distributions of allele frequencies,[6] and the distribution of single locus heterozygosity.[7] He also contributed to the development of the two main mutation models in population genetics: the infinite alleles model[8] and the stepwise mutation model.[9] Ranajit Chakraborty made a large number of methodological contributions to population genetics, such as the use of the number of rare alleles per locus to estimate mutation rates.[10]

The second area to which he made significant contributions was human genetics and human epidemiology. Among others, he studied the effects of consanguinity and consanguineous marriages on genetic load,[11] the genetics of obesity,[12] gallbladder disease,[13] and type II diabetes.[14]

His third area of research interest was forensic genetics, i.e., the use of DNA data and genetic methodology in the process of individual identification initially in criminal and civil cases, and later in determining ethnic ancestry and relationships. One of Dr. Chakraborty's main contributions to the methodology of identification by DNA data concerned the selection of control groups for ruling out errors in identification and for calculating precise probabilities of the two types of errors (false positives and false negatives). He also contributed to the study of microbial forensics, i.e., the rapid identification of bacterial agents used in bioterrorism and biocrimes.[15]

In 1991, Ranajit Chakraborty and Kenneth Kidd published one of the first articles on the utility of DNA data in forensics.[16] The importance of this paper in the rapid adoption of DNA-based methods by the legal system has been frequently commented upon.[17]

Scientific societies, service and honors edit

Dr. Chakraborty was a member or life member of a dozen or so scientific societies, among them the International Association of Human Biologists, the Indian Society of Human Genetics, the American Society of Human Genetics, The Genetics Society of America, the American Society of Naturalists, Sigma Xi, and the International Association of DNA Fingerprinting. He served as a member of the board of directors of the American Dermatoglyphics Association (1986-1890), Vice President of the Indian Society of Human Ecology (1990), and Vice President (1998-1999) and President (1999-2000) of the American Association of Anthropological Genetics. In 2001, he became Honorary Life Member of the Croatian Association of Anthropological Genetics, and in 2003, he became a Foreign Associate of the Chilean Academy of Science.

Public service edit

The development of identification methods based on DNA data in the late 1980s have brought much of Dr. Chakarborty's work to the attention of the public and the government. In 1995, he became a member of the DNA subcommittee for the State of New York, and during the 1995-2000 period, Chakraborty served as a member of the US government National DNA Advisory Board. In both cases, Chakraborty helped develop policies on the use of DNA and approved the methodologies and statistical tools in identification procedures.

In 1995, Chakraborty and Dan Hartl testified for the prosecution in the O. J. Simpson murder case.

In 1998, Chakraborty was awarded the Federal Bureau of Investigation Award for "Efforts of Research in DNA forensics during the decade of DNA 1989-1998." In 2001, Dr. Chakraborty became an Advisory Board Member at Celera Genomics dealing with 9/11 victim identification by mtDNA markers. In 2002, Chakraborty became a member of the Working Group of bacterial Forensic Genetics at the FBI Academy.

Chakraborty testified at a 2012-2014 Frye standard Hearing before Brooklyn Judge Mark Dwyer to determine the validity and the admissibility of a method widely used by the New York City chief medical examiner to identify people on the basis of samples containing mixtures of blood from different people. His testimony was crucial in the reorganization of the New York City protocols for such identifications, and for reopening many cases previously decided on the basis of a faulty method.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "In Memoriam - Dr Ranajit Chakraborty" (PDF). INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ON RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION. September 28, 2018. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  2. ^ Chakraborty R, Shaw MW, Schull WJ. 1974. Exclusion of paternity: The current state of the art. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 26:477-488.
  3. ^ a b Nei M, Maruyama T, Chakraborty R. 1975. The bottleneck effect and genetic variability in populations. Evolution 29:1-10.
  4. ^ Nei M, Fuerst PA, Chakraborty R. 1976. Testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by distribution of single locus heterozygosity Nature 262:491-493.
  5. ^ http://garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1989/A1989CB63700001.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  6. ^ Chakraborty R, Fuerst PA, Nei M. 1980. Statistical studies on protein polymorphism in natural populations. III. Distribution of allele frequencies and the number of alleles per locus. Genetics 94:1039-1063.
  7. ^ Nei M, Fuerst PA, Chakraborty R. 1976. Testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by distribution of single locus heterozygosity. Nature 262:491-4913.
  8. ^ Nei M, Chakraborty R, Fuerst PA. 1976. Infinite allele model with varying mutation rate. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 73:4164-4168.
  9. ^ Chakraborty R, Nei M. 1977. Bottleneck effects on average heterozygosity and genetic distance with the stepwise mutation model. Evolution 31:347-356.
  10. ^ Chakraborty R. 1981. Expected number of rare alleles per locus in a sample and estimation of mutation rates. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 33:481-484.
  11. ^ Chakraborty R, Chakravarti A. 1977. On consanguineous marriages and the genetic load. Hum. Genet. 36:47-54.
  12. ^ Karns R et al. 2013. Modeling metabolic syndrome through structural equations of metabolic traits, comorbid diseases, and GWAS variants. Obesity 21:E745-754.
  13. ^ Hanis CL, Chakraborty R, Ferrell RE, Schull WJ. 1986. Individual admixture estimates: disease associations and individual risk of diabetes and gallbladder disease among Mexican-Americans in Starr County, Texas. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 70:433-441.
  14. ^ Hanis CL et al. 1996 A genome-wide search for human non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes genes reveals a major susceptibility locus on chromosome 2. Nat. Genet. 13:161-166.
  15. ^ Budowle B et al. 2008. Criteria for validation of methods in microbial forensics. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74:5599–5607.
  16. ^ Chakraborty R, Kidd KK. 1991. The utility of DNA typing in forensic work. Science 254:1735-1739.
  17. ^ Giannelli PC. 1998. The DNA story: An alternative view. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 88:380-422.
  18. ^ Kirchner, Lauren (September 4, 2017). "Traces of Crime: How New York's DNA Techniques Became Tainted". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 17, 2023.

ranajit, chakraborty, april, 1946, september, 2018, human, population, geneticist, time, death, director, center, computational, genomics, institute, applied, genetics, professor, department, forensic, investigative, genetics, university, north, texas, health,. Ranajit Chakraborty April 17 1946 September 23 2018 was a human and population geneticist 1 At the time of his death he was Director of the Center for Computational Genomics at the Institute of Applied Genetics and Professor in the Department of Forensic and Investigative Genetics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth Texas 1 His scientific contributions include studies in human genetics population genetics genetic epidemiology statistical genetics and forensic genetics Ranajit ChakrabortyChakraborty ca 2008BornRanajit Chakraborty 1946 04 17 April 17 1946Baranagore West Bengal IndiaDiedSeptember 23 2018 2018 09 23 aged 72 Fort Worth Texas United StatesNationalityAmericanAlma materIndian Statistical InstituteSpouseDr Bandana M ChakrabortyScientific careerFieldsHuman geneticsPopulation geneticsForensic geneticsInstitutionsThe University of Texas Health Science Center at HoustonUniversity of CincinnatiUniversity of North TexasDoctoral advisorC R RaoDoctoral studentsJill S Barnholtz Sloan Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Academic career 3 Scientific contributions 4 Scientific societies service and honors 5 Public service 6 ReferencesEarly life and education editRanajit Chakraborty was born in Baranagore West Bengal India At his graduation from high school in 1963 he was awarded First Class with Distinction Certificate from the Board of Secondary Education of West Bengal In 1967 got his Bachelor of Statistics degree with honors from the Indian Statistical Institute Calcutta and a year later was awarded a Master of Statistics with specialization in Mathematical Genetics and Advanced Probability In 1971 he got his Ph D in Biostatistics from the Indian Statistical Institute 1 His dissertation supervisor was C R Rao FRS Before obtaining his first tenure track academic position Chakraborty served as Research Scholar and Senior Research Fellow at the Indian Statistical Institute Visiting Lecturer of Statistics at the Indian Institute of Management and Visiting Consultant at the Data Reference Center of the World Health Organization at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu Academic career editIn 1973 Chakraborty joined the faculty at the Center for Demographic and Population Genetics which is now the Human Genetics Center at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston From 1996 to 2001 he held the Allan King Professorship at the School of Public Health In 2001 he became the Robert A Kehoe Professor and Director of the Center for Genome Information at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center in Cincinnati Ohio In 2009 Chakraborty joined the Department of Forensic and Investigative Genetics University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth Texas In addition to his main academic appointments throughout his career Chakraborty served in various capacities on the faculties of University of Houston Stanford University University of Stockholm University of Michigan Rice University and Universidad de Chile Scientific contributions editRanajit Chakraborty wrote six books and over 600 scientific articles 2 3 4 Three of these became citation classics 5 Chakraborty s research contributions were in three main areas During the first phase of his professional career he contributed to the development of population genetics and molecular evolution In collaboration with Masatoshi Nei Takeo Maruyama and Paul Fuerst he studied among others the effects of bottlenecks on genetic variability 3 the distributions of allele frequencies 6 and the distribution of single locus heterozygosity 7 He also contributed to the development of the two main mutation models in population genetics the infinite alleles model 8 and the stepwise mutation model 9 Ranajit Chakraborty made a large number of methodological contributions to population genetics such as the use of the number of rare alleles per locus to estimate mutation rates 10 The second area to which he made significant contributions was human genetics and human epidemiology Among others he studied the effects of consanguinity and consanguineous marriages on genetic load 11 the genetics of obesity 12 gallbladder disease 13 and type II diabetes 14 His third area of research interest was forensic genetics i e the use of DNA data and genetic methodology in the process of individual identification initially in criminal and civil cases and later in determining ethnic ancestry and relationships One of Dr Chakraborty s main contributions to the methodology of identification by DNA data concerned the selection of control groups for ruling out errors in identification and for calculating precise probabilities of the two types of errors false positives and false negatives He also contributed to the study of microbial forensics i e the rapid identification of bacterial agents used in bioterrorism and biocrimes 15 In 1991 Ranajit Chakraborty and Kenneth Kidd published one of the first articles on the utility of DNA data in forensics 16 The importance of this paper in the rapid adoption of DNA based methods by the legal system has been frequently commented upon 17 Scientific societies service and honors editDr Chakraborty was a member or life member of a dozen or so scientific societies among them the International Association of Human Biologists the Indian Society of Human Genetics the American Society of Human Genetics The Genetics Society of America the American Society of Naturalists Sigma Xi and the International Association of DNA Fingerprinting He served as a member of the board of directors of the American Dermatoglyphics Association 1986 1890 Vice President of the Indian Society of Human Ecology 1990 and Vice President 1998 1999 and President 1999 2000 of the American Association of Anthropological Genetics In 2001 he became Honorary Life Member of the Croatian Association of Anthropological Genetics and in 2003 he became a Foreign Associate of the Chilean Academy of Science Public service editThe development of identification methods based on DNA data in the late 1980s have brought much of Dr Chakarborty s work to the attention of the public and the government In 1995 he became a member of the DNA subcommittee for the State of New York and during the 1995 2000 period Chakraborty served as a member of the US government National DNA Advisory Board In both cases Chakraborty helped develop policies on the use of DNA and approved the methodologies and statistical tools in identification procedures In 1995 Chakraborty and Dan Hartl testified for the prosecution in the O J Simpson murder case In 1998 Chakraborty was awarded the Federal Bureau of Investigation Award for Efforts of Research in DNA forensics during the decade of DNA 1989 1998 In 2001 Dr Chakraborty became an Advisory Board Member at Celera Genomics dealing with 9 11 victim identification by mtDNA markers In 2002 Chakraborty became a member of the Working Group of bacterial Forensic Genetics at the FBI Academy Chakraborty testified at a 2012 2014 Frye standard Hearing before Brooklyn Judge Mark Dwyer to determine the validity and the admissibility of a method widely used by the New York City chief medical examiner to identify people on the basis of samples containing mixtures of blood from different people His testimony was crucial in the reorganization of the New York City protocols for such identifications and for reopening many cases previously decided on the basis of a faulty method 18 References edit a b c In Memoriam Dr Ranajit Chakraborty PDF INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ON RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION September 28 2018 Retrieved November 4 2018 Chakraborty R Shaw MW Schull WJ 1974 Exclusion of paternity The current state of the art Am J Hum Genet 26 477 488 a b Nei M Maruyama T Chakraborty R 1975 The bottleneck effect and genetic variability in populations Evolution 29 1 10 Nei M Fuerst PA Chakraborty R 1976 Testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by distribution of single locus heterozygosity Nature 262 491 493 http garfield library upenn edu classics1989 A1989CB63700001 pdf bare URL PDF Chakraborty R Fuerst PA Nei M 1980 Statistical studies on protein polymorphism in natural populations III Distribution of allele frequencies and the number of alleles per locus Genetics 94 1039 1063 Nei M Fuerst PA Chakraborty R 1976 Testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by distribution of single locus heterozygosity Nature 262 491 4913 Nei M Chakraborty R Fuerst PA 1976 Infinite allele model with varying mutation rate Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 73 4164 4168 Chakraborty R Nei M 1977 Bottleneck effects on average heterozygosity and genetic distance with the stepwise mutation model Evolution 31 347 356 Chakraborty R 1981 Expected number of rare alleles per locus in a sample and estimation of mutation rates Am J Hum Genet 33 481 484 Chakraborty R Chakravarti A 1977 On consanguineous marriages and the genetic load Hum Genet 36 47 54 Karns R et al 2013 Modeling metabolic syndrome through structural equations of metabolic traits comorbid diseases and GWAS variants Obesity 21 E745 754 Hanis CL Chakraborty R Ferrell RE Schull WJ 1986 Individual admixture estimates disease associations and individual risk of diabetes and gallbladder disease among Mexican Americans in Starr County Texas Am J Phys Anthropol 70 433 441 Hanis CL et al 1996 A genome wide search for human non insulin dependent type 2 diabetes genes reveals a major susceptibility locus on chromosome 2 Nat Genet 13 161 166 Budowle B et al 2008 Criteria for validation of methods in microbial forensics Appl Environ Microbiol 74 5599 5607 Chakraborty R Kidd KK 1991 The utility of DNA typing in forensic work Science 254 1735 1739 Giannelli PC 1998 The DNA story An alternative view Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 88 380 422 Kirchner Lauren September 4 2017 Traces of Crime How New York s DNA Techniques Became Tainted The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 17 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ranajit Chakraborty amp oldid 1169465274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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