One of the greatest biologists of the 20th century, Seymour Benzer died last Friday. In his obituary post John Dennehy focuses on the bacteriophage work that led to deciphering of the genetic “alphabet”, and so does Carl Zimmer.
Readers of my blog probably know the name more in the connection with the discovery of the first clock mutants in Drosophila, by Ron Konopka in Benzer’s lab. You can read the paper itself (pdf) and watch a video in which Benzer explains it.
My Homepage
My homepage is at http://coturnix.org. It is temporarily stripped to minimal information, but more will come soon.Grab my RSS feed:
-
Join 1,499 other subscribers
Search This Blog:
Archives
Categories
Recent Comments:
Bora Zivkovic on Morning at Triton Angie Lindsay Ma on Morning at Triton Linda chamblee on Morning at Triton Jekyll » Blog… on The Big Announcement, this tim… Mike H on The Big Announcement, this tim… -
Recent Posts
Top Posts
- Friday Weird Sex Blogging - Corkscrewing
- How to Fix an Authentic Serbian* Sarma (Stuffed Cabbage)
- Evan Bayh decided not to run for President
- How to talk to rightwing suckers
- ScienceOnline'09 - Registration is Open!
- New and Exciting in PLoS ONE
- Little Red Riding Hood, the modern version (video)
- Quick updates: Science Studio, travel and quotes.
- Cloning Domesticated Animals: Pros and Cons
- Clock Tutorial #8: Circadian Organization In Non-Mammalian Vertebrates
@BoraZ on Twitter:
Tweets by BoraZCC licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.PayPal

Sitemeter






Just to emphasize further, Benzer essentially created the field of neurogenetics from nothing. Everyone thought the idea that a single gene mutation could have a specific effect on a complex behavior was totally insane. Ron and Seymour proved them wrong.