Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2009
In December 1992 Bertil Daneholt presented the Nobel laureates in physiology and medicine for that year to the assembly of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm:
In the middle of the last century, the Austrian monk Gregor Mendel conducted his famous breeding experiments with the garden pea. … To Mendel a gene was an abstract concept, which he used to interpret his breeding experiments. He had no idea of the physical properties of genes.
Only in the mid-1940s could it be established that in terms of chemistry, genetic material is composed of the nucleic acid DNA. About ten years later the double helical structure of DNA was revealed. Ever since then, progress within the field of molecular biology has been very rapid …
Initially, genetic material was studied mainly in simple organisms, particularly in bacteria and bacterial viruses. It was shown that a gene occurs in the form of a single continuous segment of the long, thread-like DNA, and it was generally assumed that the genes in all organisms looked this way. Therefore, it was a scientific sensation when this year's Nobel Laureates, Richard Roberts and Phillip Sharp, in 1977, independently of each other, observed that a gene in higher organisms could be present in the genetic material as several distinct and separate segments. Such a gene resembles a mosaic.… It soon became apparent that most genes in higher organisms, including ourselves, exhibited this mosaic structure. …
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