James Thomson (cell biologist)

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James A. Thomson (born in Oak Park, Illinois) is an American developmental biologist who also serves as a professor of anatomy in the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and as the chief pathologist at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center.

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[edit] Education

Thomson graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a B.S. in biophysics at the University of Illinois in 1981. He then entered the Veterinary Medical Scientist Training Program at the University of Pennsylvania, receiving his doctorate in veterinary medicine in 1985, and his doctorate in molecular biology in 1988. His doctoral thesis, conducted under the supervision of Davor Solter at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, PA, involved understanding genetic imprinting in early mammalian development.

Dr. Thomson joined the University of Wisconsin after spending two years as a post-doctoral research fellow in the Primate In Vitro Fertilization and Experimental Embryology Laboratory at the Oregon National Primate Research Center.

[edit] Current employment

In addition to being a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he is also a member of the Genome Center of Wisconsin.

[edit] Thomson's research

Since joining the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center, he has conducted pioneering work in the isolation and culture of non-human primate and human embryonic stem cells, undifferentiated cells that have the ability to become any of the cells that make up the tissues of the body. Dr. Thomson directed the group that reported the first isolation of embryonic stem cell lines from a non-human primate in 1995, work that led his group to the first successful isolation of human embryonic stem cell lines in 1998.

On November 6, 1998, Science published the results of his research, "Embryonic Stem Cell Lines Derived from Human Blastocysts". [1]

[edit] Thomson's patents

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Embryonic Stem Cell Lines Derived from Human Blastocysts", Science, November 6, 1998

[edit] External links

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