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Human Genetic Variation
Speaker:
Dr. Maynard Olson
Professorof Genome Sciences and of Medicine
Director of the University of Washington Genome Center
University of Washington
Member of National Academy of Sciences of USA
Member of National Human Genome Research Institute Council
Time: 1:30-2:30pm, Wednesday, Sep 13, 2006
Location: New Life Science Building, Room 517
Host: Liping Wei, Center for Bioinformatics
Biography:
Dr. Olson was trained as a chemist at California Institute
of Technology and Stanford University, where he earned his
Ph.D. in inorganic chemistry. He taught chemistry at
Dartmouth College, and genetics at the University of
Washington in Seattle and Washington University in
St. Louis. He also served as an investigator for the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute before returning to
Seattle, where he has served as a professor of molecular
biotechnology, medicine and genetics, and as an adjunct
professor of computer science. Additionally, he serves as
director of the University of Washington Genome Center.
Olson recognized early on that sequencing the human genome
could provide the key to the prevention and treatment of
disease. As a pilot project for human-genome analysis, he
launched an ultimately successful effort to construct a
detailed physical map of the yeast genome in 1979; the
yeast mapping was the first "genome project" directed at
the complete analysis of a cellular genome. While in
St. Louis, Dr. Olson led efforts to develop YACs, which
are yeast chromosomes that have adopted and cloned
introduced DNA. The technology, which became the basis of
physical maps of all mammals, allows scientists to study
large portions of the human genome and has proved
indispensable for researchers tracking the genes involved
in diseases ranging from colon cancer to mental
retardation. His introduction of STSs quickly led to the
first physical maps of whole human chromosomes and
provided the foundation to integrate diverse types of
genome maps.
Dr. Olson has also participated extensively in the
formulation of policy for the Human Genome Project. In
1987, he served on the National Research Council Committee
on Mapping and Sequencing of the Human Genome, and from
1989 to 1992, on the Program Advisory Committee on the
Human Genome at the National Institutes of
Health. Presently, he serves on the National Human Genome
Research Institute Council.
Dr. Olson was awarded the Genetics Society of America
Medal in 1992, was elected to the National Academy of
Sciences in 1994, received the City of Medicine Award for
exceptional contributions to medicine in the public
interest in 2000, and in 2002, received the Gairdner
Foundation International Award for his scientific
contributions to the Human Genome Project. He was
appointed to the National Human Genome Research Institute
Council in 1999.
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