Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal
Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Lifetime achievement in the field of genetics |
Date | 1981 |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Genetics Society of America |
Website | www |
The Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal is awarded by the Genetics Society of America (GSA) for lifetime contributions to the field of genetics.
The medal is named after Thomas Hunt Morgan, the 1933 Nobel Prize winner, who received this award for his work with Drosophila and his "discoveries concerning the role played by the chromosome in heredity." Morgan recognized that Drosophila, which could be bred quickly and inexpensively, had large quantities of offspring and a short life cycle, would make an excellent organism for genetic studies. His studies of the white-eye mutation and discovery of sex-linked inheritance provided the first experimental evidence that chromosomes are the carriers of genetic information. Subsequent studies in his laboratory led to the discovery of recombination and the first genetic maps.
In 1981 the GSA established the Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal for lifetime achievement to honor this classical geneticist who was among those who laid the foundation for modern genetics.
Laureates
[edit]Source: Genetics Society of America
- 1981 Barbara McClintock (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)
and Marcus M. Rhoades - 1982 Sewall Wright
- 1983 Edward B. Lewis (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)
- 1984 George Wells Beadle (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)
and R. Alexander Brink - 1985 Herschel Roman
- 1986 Seymour Benzer
- 1987 James F. Crow
- 1988 Norman H. Giles
- 1989 Dan L. Lindsley
- 1990 Charles Yanofsky
- 1991 Armin Dale Kaiser
- 1992 Edward H. Coe, Jr.[1]
- 1993 Ray D. Owen
- 1994 David D. Perkins
- 1995 Matthew Meselson[2]
- 1996 Franklin W. Stahl[3]
- 1997 Oliver E. Nelson[4]
- 1998 Norman H. Horowitz
- 1999 Salome Waelsch[5]
- 2000 Evelyn M. Witkin[6]
- 2001 Yasuji Oshima[7]
- 2002 Ira Herskowitz
- 2003 David S. Hogness[8]
- 2004 Bruce N. Ames[9]
- 2005 Robert L. Metzenberg[10]
- 2006 Masatoshi Nei[11]
- 2007 Oliver Smithies (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)[12]
- 2008 Michael Ashburner[13]
- 2009 John Roth
- 2010 Alexander Tzagoloff
- 2011 James E. Haber
- 2012 Kathryn V. Anderson[14]
- 2013 Thomas D. Petes[15]
- 2014 Frederick M. Ausubel, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital
- 2015 Brian Charlesworth, University of Edinburgh
- 2016 Nancy Kleckner, Harvard University
- 2017 Richard Lewontin, Harvard University
- 2018 Barbara J. Meyer, University of California, Berkeley
- 2019 Daniel Hartl, Harvard University
- 2020 David Botstein, Calico Labs and Gerald Fink, Whitehead Institute, MIT
- 2021 Ruth Lehmann, Whitehead Institute and Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- 2022 Michael Lynch, Biodesign Center for Mechanisms of Evolution, Arizona State University
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Nelson, O. E. (1992). "1992 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal: Edward H. Coe, Jr". Genetics. 131 (2): S11. PMID 1644267.
- ^ Drake, J. W.; Meyer, B. J. (1996). "The 1995 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Matthew Meselson". Genetics. 142 (1): 1–2. PMC 1206937. PMID 8770578.
- ^ Drake, J. W. (1997). "The 1996 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal Franklin W. Stahl". Genetics. 145 (1): 1–2. PMC 1207768. PMID 9017382.
- ^ Ganetzky, B. (1998). "The 1997 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Oliver Evans Nelson, Jr". Genetics. 148 (1): 1–2. PMC 1459803. PMID 9475714.
- ^ Silver, L. M. (2000). "The 1999 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Salome G. Waelsch". Genetics. 154 (1): 1–2. PMC 1460893. PMID 10681180.
- ^ Gross, C. A. (2001). "The 2000 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Evelyn M. Witkin". Genetics. 157 (2): 459–461. PMC 1461505. PMID 11370620.
- ^ Herskowitz, I.; O'Shea, E. (2002). "The 2001 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Yasuji Oshima". Genetics. 160 (2): 367–368. PMC 1461977. PMID 11894818.
- ^ Burtis, K. C.; Hawley, R. S.; Lipshitz, H. D. (2003). "The 2003 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal; David S. Hogness". Genetics. 164 (4): 1243–1245. PMC 1462660. PMID 15106660.
- ^ Smith, G. R.; Johnston, M. (2004). "The 2004 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal". Genetics. 166 (2): 645–646. doi:10.1534/genetics.166.2.645. PMC 1470756. PMID 15020453.
- ^ Selker, E. U.; Davis, R. H.; Perkins, D. D. (2005). "The 2005 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal. Robert L. Metzenberg". Genetics. 169 (2): 503–505. PMC 1449129. PMID 15731512.
- ^ Weir, B. (2005). "The 2006 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal". Genetics. 172 (2): 719–720. doi:10.1534/genetics.104.17221. PMC 1456235. PMID 16505213.
- ^ John, S.; Magnuson, T. (2007). "The 2007 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal". Genetics. 175 (2): 459–462. doi:10.1534/genetics.104.017521. PMC 1800601. PMID 17322349.
- ^ Spradling, A. (2008). "The 2008 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal". Genetics. 178 (3): 1123–1124. doi:10.1534/genetics.104.017832. PMC 2278087. PMID 18385103.
- ^ Wolfner, M. F.; Schedl, T. (2012). "The 2012 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal: Kathryn V. Anderson". Genetics. 191 (2): 293–295. doi:10.1534/genetics.112.139030. PMC 3374297. PMID 22701044.
- ^ Jinks-Robertson, S.; Hieter, P. (2013). "The 2013 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal: Thomas Douglas Petes". Genetics. 194 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1534/genetics.113.150664. PMC 3632457. PMID 23633133.