Seymour Benzer

Seymour Benzer

Infobox Scientist
name = Seymour Benzer



image_width =
caption = Seymour Benzer with a "Drosophila" model, 1974
birth_date = birth date|1921|10|15|df=yes
birth_place = New York City, New York, USA
death_date = death date and age|2007|11|30|1921|09|15|df=yes
death_place = Pasadena, California, USA
nationality = United States
field = Physics, molecular biology, behavioral genetics
work_institutions = Purdue University, California Institute of Technology
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = molecular and behavioural biology
influences =
influenced =
prizes = Wolf Prize in Medicine, 1991
footnotes =

Seymour Benzer (October 15, 1921 – November 30, 2007) was an accomplished American physicist, molecular biologist and behavioral geneticist. With a career that started with the molecular biology revolution of the 1950s, Seymour Benzer was to the end very active as a researcher, where he led a productive lab as the James G. Boswell Professor of Neuroscience, Emeritus, at the California Institute of Technology.cite news | author=Carl Zimmer | title=Seymour Benzer, geneticist, is dead at 86 | work=The New York Times| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/08/science/08benzer.html?ref=science | date=8 December 2007 | accessdate=2008-02-18] [cite journal
quotes = yes
last=Greenspan
first=Ralph J
authorlink=
year=2008
month=Feb
title=Seymour Benzer (1921-2007)
journal=Curr. Biol.
volume=18
issue=3
pages=R106–10
publisher = | location =
pmid = 18345547
bibcode = | oclc =| id = | url = | language = | format = | accessdate = | laysummary = | laysource = | laydate = | quote =
doi=10.1016/j.cub.2007.12.039
]

Benzer was born in New York City to parents from Poland. As a boy, he had his first experiences in studying biology, catching frogs and dissecting them. For his 13th birthday he received a microscope, “and that opened up the whole world,” Benzer recalled in a 1990 interview for an oral history project at Caltech. In 1938 he enrolled at Brooklyn College where he majored in physics.

Research

Molecular biology

Seymour Benzer started his scientific career as a solid state physicist at Purdue University. After completing his Ph.D, he began his research in biophysics and moved into the area of bacteriophage genetics. After a short stay at Caltech, Benzer returned to Purdue where he developed the rII system, a new genetic technique involving recombination in mutant bacteriophage. [cite journal | last=Benzer | first=Seymour | title=On the Topography of the Genetic Fine Structure | journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume=47 | issue=3 | pages=403–415 | format=.PDF | year=1961 | url=http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/47/3/403.pdf | accessdate=2008-02-18 | doi=10.1073/pnas.47.3.403] Taking advantage of the enormous number of recombinants that could be analyzed in the rII mutant system, Benzer provided the first evidence that the gene is not an indivisible entity, as previously believed. Benzer proved that mutations were distributed in many different parts of a single gene, and the resolving power of his system allowed him to discern mutants that differ at the level of a single nucleotide. Benzer's experiments with the rII system are widely considered among the most elegant experiments in modern genetics, and many believe that Benzer should have been awarded the Nobel Prize for it.Fact|date=February 2008

In his molecular biology period, Benzer dissected the fine structure of a single gene, laying down the ground work for decades of mutation analysis and genetic engineering, and setting up a paradigm using the rII phage that would later be used by Francis Crick to establish the triplet code of DNA.

Behavioral genetics

After his work in phage genetics, Benzer turned to the fruit fly "Drosophila" to study the genetic basis of animal behavior. He then pioneered the field of neurogenetics working with mutants of "Drosophila melanogaster". Benzer, with student Ron Konopka, discovered the first circadian rhythm mutants in a gene they called "period". This was the first of several seminal studies of single genes affecting behavior, studies that have been replicated in other animal models and are now the basis for the booming field of molecular biology of behavior. In particular, the study of circadian rhythms has now become ubiquitous, and homologs of the original gene have been identified in many organisms.

Benzer was at the forefront of the study of neurodegeneration in fruit flies, modeling human diseases and attempting to suppress them. He also contributed to the field of aging biology, looking for mutants with altered longevity and trying to dissect the mechanisms by which an organism can escape the inevitable functional downfall and its associated diseases. [cite web | url=http://ouroboros.wordpress.com/2007/12/03/would-that-he-were-methuselah-seymour-benzer-1921-2007/ | title=Would that he were Methuselah: Seymour Benzer, 1921-2007 | work=Ouroboros | date=2007-12-03 | accessdate=2007-12-07]

Honors and awards

He is a recipient of the Gairdner Foundation International Award (1964), the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research (1971), the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University (1976), [cite web | author=The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize Committee | title=The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize for Biology Or Biochemistry | url=http://www.cumc.columbia.edu/horwitz/previous_awardee.html | publisher=Columbia University Medical Center | date=2007 | accessdate=2008-02-18] the National Medal of Science (1982), the Wolf Prize in Medicine (1991), the Crafoord Prize (1993), a second Gairdner award for his contributions to the field of neurogenetics (2004) and the Albany Medical Center Prize (2006). Benzer is one of only a handful of two-time winners of the Gairdner Award, widely recognized as one the top prizes in the biological sciences, and often a Nobel Prize predictor. The Albany Medical Center Prize has been called the "American Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine".

Seymour Benzer was a member of the French Academy of Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Royal Society.

Seymour Benzer died of a stroke at the Huntington Hospital in Pasadena, California. [cite press release | title=Neurogenetics Pioneer Seymour Benzer Dies | url=http://mr.caltech.edu/media/Press_Releases/PR13076.html | publisher=California Institute of Technology | date=30 November 2007 | accessdate=2008-02-18]

Books

Benzer is the subject of the 1999 book "Time, Love, Memory: A Great Biologist and His Quest for the Origins of Behavior" by Pulitzer laureat Jonathan Weiner, [cite book | last=Weiner | first=Jonathan | title=Time, Love, Memory: A Great Biologist and His Quest for the Origins of Behavior | location=New York | publisher=Knopf | year=1999 | isbn=0679444351 ] and "Reconceiving the Gene: Seymour Benzer's Adventures in Phage Genetics" by Lawrence Holmes. [cite book | last=Holmes | first=Frederic Lawrence | coauthors=Summers, William C. | title=Reconceiving the Gene: Seymour Benzer's Adventures in Phage Genetics | location=New Haven | publisher=Yale University Press | year=2006 | isbn=0300110782 ]

References

External links

* [http://biology.caltech.edu/Members/Benzer Dr. Benzer's home page at the Caltech Biology Division website]
* [http://benzerserver.caltech.edu/ Benzer Lab home page]
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3042338.ece Obituary in "The Times", 13 December 2007]
* [http://oralhistories.library.caltech.edu/27/ Interview with Seymour Benzer] conducted by the Oral History Project of the Caltech Archives
* [http://www.msu.edu/course/lbs/333/fall/weiner.html A Conversation with Jonathan Weiner, author of Time, Love, Memory]


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