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Friday, June 17, 2022

Natural GMOs Part 306. On transposon day June 16 2022 -- Happy 120th birthday Dr McClintock.




Yes, the Pundit remembers the event reading about Barbara McClintock's discoveries in genetics textbooks sometime in the late '60s early '70s. He actually has images in his mind of reading the pages in his mind-- the date stamp is not there though. He will now put a note in his diary -- June 16th.

Likely Barbara is the reason he started this Natural GMOs post series. And follows @MobDNAjournal on Twitter

A quote from the great page currently at Mobile DNA at BioMedCentral:

 Mobile DNA celebrates Transposon Day every June 16th, to commemorate the birthdate of the founder of transposable elements research, Barbara McClintock (1902-1992). This day was designated to honor her legacy and draw attention to the important research that has changed the way researchers think about evolution, disease, and genomics.

Last Fall, a mini-symposium reflecting on Barbara McClintock’s background and scientific contributions was held at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Watch the recording of this event here: The Life and Legacy of Barbara McClintock. Dr. Molly Gale Hammell, Associate Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, who was one of the presenters at this event, kindly shared her slides with us for this day.

We encourage the TE community to share your thoughts about how McClintock's research influenced your own on Twitter, using the hashtag #transposonday2022.

Happy 5th Annual Transposon Day!

Transposon Day 2022: Remembering Prof. Haig Kazazian

New Content ItemOn TE Day this year, Mobile DNA would especially like to remember late Prof. Haig Kazazian (1937 - 2022).

Prof. Haig Kazazian attended Dartmouth Medical School, and obtained his MD degree at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He trained in pediatrics at the University of Minnesota Hospital and Johns Hopkins Hospital, and in genetics at Hopkins with Barton Childs, MD, and in molecular biology at the NIH with Harvey Itano, MD. He joined the faculty at Johns Hopkins in 1969, becoming a full professor and chief of the Pediatric Genetics Unit in 1977, and director of the Center for Medical Genetics at Johns Hopkins in 1988. In 1994, he was named Chair of the Department of Genetics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Since 2010, he has been a Professor in the Institute of Genetic Medicine at Johns Hopkins. Prof. Kazazian is known for discovering much of the normal variation in a cluster of genes involved in production of human hemoglobin. Over the past 30 years his work has led to groundbreaking discoveries about how mobile DNA contributes to human disease and genome evolution and has received a number of honors for his research, most notably the 2008 William Allan Award, the top honor of the American Society of Human Genetics.

From 2015 until 2020, Prof. Kazazian was Mobile DNA Editor-in-Chief. We are very grateful to Prof. Kazazian for the years of his contributions and engagement in the journal.

We invite you to watch the interview Prof. Kazazian gave BMC Podcast three years ago: here.


...(page continues currently but they may revise it).

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