Biohealthmatics.com The 24th annual conference TEPR 2008 will open its doors on May 19, 2008 at the Fort Lauderdale Convention Center to more than 500 speakers, close to 5,000 attendees, and approximately 200 exhibitors.
advertisement
Biohealthmatics Centers
Home
Jobs Search
Career Center
Networking Center
Company Profiles
Knowledge Center
Industry News
Web Directory
Industry Books
Featured Articles

Biohealthmatics.com....linking professionals
advertisement

Join Us

Link To Us





In the Beginning Was the Worm: Finding the Secrets of Life in a Tiny Hermaphrodite

by Andrew Brown

Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: Tuesday, July 15, 2003
Number of Pages: 248
ISBN: 0231131461


Book Summary:

This is the story of how three men won the Nobel Prize for their research on the humble nematode worm C. elegans; how their extraordinary discovery led to the sequencing of the human genome; how a global multibillion-dollar industry was born; and how the mysteries of life were revealed in a tiny, brainless worm.

In 1998 the nematode worm -- perhaps the most intensively studied animal on earth -- was the first multicellular organism ever to have its genome sequenced and its DNA mapped and read. "When we understand the worm, we will understand life," predicted John Sulston, one of the three Nobel laureates, and his prediction proved astonishingly accurate. Four years later, the research that led to this extraordinary event garnered three scientists a Nobel Prize. Along with Robert Horvitz and Sydney Brenner, Sulston discovered the phenomenon of programmed cell death in the worm, an essential concept that explains how biological development occurs in animal life and, as Horvitz later showed, how it occurs in human life. C. elegans is about as simple as an animal can be, but understanding its genetic organization is helping to reveal the mechanisms of life and, by extension, the mechanisms of our own lives. In the Beginning Was the Worm shows that in order to unlock the secrets of the human genome we must first understand the worm.

But this story is about more than just the worm. It is about how an eccentric group of impassioned scientists toiled in near anonymity for years, driven only by a deep passion for knowledge and scientific discovery. It is the story of countless hours of research, immense ambition, and one of the greatest discoveries in human history.


advertisement

Book Reviews

Post a book review for this title

No reviews for this title. Be the first to post a review.

 

More Genomics BooksMore Genomics Books ...

 
 

 

 

 

   
Copyright © 2007 Biohealthmatics.com. All Rights Reserved. Contact Us - About Us - Privacy Policy - Terms & Conditions - Resources
Can't find what you are looking for? View our Site Map

Last Updated: 24 November 2007.