The Scientist

celebrates the seven key technologies that have, and are, transforming life science research. Each of our chosen seven, the DNA sequencer, the BLAST algorithm, the DNA microarray, the yeast two-hybrid assay, the MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer, the lab-on-a-chip, and the optical trap - is in its own way shaking the foundation of life science research. As a group, they tell the story of the past and future of molecular biology.

By Richard Gallagher
and Jeffrey M. Perkel
Evolutionary theory contributes little to experimental biology
Philip S. Skell
By Stephen Pincock
By Stephen Pincock
By John Dudley Miller
Where would the Human Genome Project, bioinformatics, and life sciences in general, be without it?
By Alison McCook
How 90,000 lines of code helped spark the bioinformatics explosion
By Anne Harding
Homegrown or commercially supplied, the array provides a panoramic view of the genome
By Lissa Harris
How a grant-writing epiphany led to a functional genomics workhorse
By Mark Greener and Jeffrey M. Perkel
Pioneering ionization technique paved the way for proteomics
By Aileen Constans
Semiconductor-industry sensibilities are shrinking the life science lab
By Megan M. Stephan
How a laser beam and some clever engineering spawned a biophysics revolution
By Don Monroe
For Bruce Lahn, an interest in human genetics has roots in Chinese protests
By Karen Hopkin