|
The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Joshua Lederberg dies
Posted by Andrea Gawrylewski [Entry posted at 4th February 2008 10:31 PM GMT]
Rate this article
Return to Top comment: Josh's tripartite brain by Larry Kedes [Comment posted 2008-02-06 13:24:39] A fond recollection that may well reveal the depth of his intellectual powers:
My first encounter with Josh Lederberg as a Stanford faculty member was at a scientific presentation in a small conference room. Josh entered carrying a stack of journals and a paper sack lunch. Josh appeared to be paying little attention to the presentation; he rummaged in his sack with gusto for lunch items and read the journals intently. But about twenty minutes into the talk he interrupted with a devastating barrage of insightful questions that revealed he had followed the talk better than any of the rest of us. Return to Top comment: Pioneer in microbial genetics by Fukai Bao [Comment posted 2008-02-05 20:40:37] He pave the way for the establishment of modern genetics. I read his many insightful papers which give me a deep impact.
Fukai Bao,MD,Postdoc(Yale) Professor and chairman Department of Microbiology and immunology Kunming Medical College 191 Renminxi road,Kunming 650031, Yunnan P. R. of China Postcode:650031 Tel:0086-871-5338884,5314539,13888369882 E-mail:baofukai@126.com fukai.bao@yale.edu Return to Top comment: Josh Lederberg, a true visionary by GAYLEN BRADLEY [Comment posted 2008-02-05 14:28:54] I had the great pleasure of knowing Josh Lederberg over a span of more than five decades. Josh and Ed Tatum had just set microbial genetics on a new course, with conjugation in Escherichia coli K-12. In rapid succession came replica plating, indirect selection of drug resistant mutants, limited and general transduction. Josh had a unique gift for recognizing important questions and finding direct approaches leading to their resolution, as he did in demonstrating mitochondrial self-replication and the action of penicillin to produce spheroplasts. Josh laid the conceptual foundation for our understanding of the gene: cis/trans effects (cistron); recombination unit ('rit'); mutational unit ('mit'); and physiological unit ('phit'). Josh spelled out a conceptual basis for the gentic control of antibody formation, and more recently, the recognition of the 'biome' as the true gentic complement of multicellular organisms. Few scientists have opened so many doors that have provided insight into life's processes. Return to Top comment: A charming moment with Prof. Lederberg by DONALD CHAMBERS [Comment posted 2008-02-05 14:28:01] Prof. Lederberg and I had a wonderful moment that illustrates his nature which I would like to share.
In 1993, I organized and chaired a NY Academy of Sciences meeting to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the elucidation of the structure of the double helix by Watson and Crick. During the meeting, attended by over 1000 people (published as DNA, The Double Helix, Perspective and Prospective at Forety Years, ed.DA Chambers, Annals, NY Acad. Sci,, Vol. 758), Josh turned to me and remarked your accent is similar to mine so which high school in New York did you attend; Stuyvesant or Bronx Science? I answered Bronx Science to which Josh responded with a twinkle, "Oh, unlike you, I had the best of both worlds. I graduated from Stuyvesant but some years ago, I was invited to give a lecture at Science and my price was an honorary diploma, so now I have diplomas from both schools and am a happy man". Prof. Lederberg had a pride and passion for excellence coupled with a wonderful sense of humor that was a joy to behold. Return to Top comment: Thank you for the molecular journey!! by P Thompson [Comment posted 2008-02-05 12:36:24] I fondly recall my molecular biology course, taught by geneticist Tex Barnett, at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He took us all down that wonderful genetics highway. One of the first stops on the trip was Dr. Lederberg's seminal work. The genetic exchange he discovered is, of course, foundational to the microbiology course I now teach. Thank you, Dr. Lederberg, and Dr. Barnett. Comment on this blog |