Walter Bodmer

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Sir Walter Bodmer FRS (born 10 January 1936[1] in Frankfurt am Main, Germany [2]) is a German-born British human geneticist.

Biography

Early life

Bodmer's father was Jewish so the family were obliged to leave Germany in 1938 and settled in Manchester.

Education

Reading Mathematics at Cambridge University, Walter Bodmer worked with Sir Ronald Fisher, moving into statistics. After receiving his PhD at Cambridge University he continued as a Fellow.

Career

In 1961 Bodmer joined Prof. Joshua Lederberg's laboratory in the Genetics Department of Stanford University, continuing his research on population genetics, using the computing facilities that Stanford could offer.[3] In 1962 Walter Bodmer was appointed to the faculty at Stanford. He left Stanford University in 1970 to become the first Professor of Genetics at Oxford University .[4]

Bodmer developed models for population genetics and worked on the human leukocyte antigen system and the use of somatic cell hybrids for human linkage studies. In 1985 he chaired a Royal Society committee which wrote The Bodmer Report; this has been credited with starting the movement for the public understanding of science. [5]

Walter Bodmer was one of the first to suggest the idea of the Human Genome Project.[6] In 1987 he received the Ellison-Cliffe Medal from the Royal Society of Medicine. He was the director of research (19791991) and then Director General (19911996) of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund. He was also Chancellor of the University of Salford, England (19952005; succeeded by Sir Martin Harris) and Principal of Hertford College, Oxford (19962005; succeeded by Dr. John Landers).

In 2005, Sir Walter Bodmer was appointed to lead a £2.3 million project (roughly 4.5 million USD) by the Wellcome Trust at Oxford University to examine the genetic makeup of the United Kingdom - the People of the British Isles project. Professor Sir Walter Bodmer was joined by Oxford Professor Peter Donnelly (a population genetics and statistics expert) and the Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow Professor Lon Cardon. Professor Bodmer said "Our aim is to characterise the genetic make-up of the British population and relate this to the historical and archaeological evidence." The researchers presented some of their findings to the public via the Channel 4 television series "Faces of Britain." On 14 April 2007, Channel 4 in Britain aired a program that highlighted the study’s then-current findings. The project took DNA samples from hundreds of volunteers throughout Britain, seeking tell-tale fragments of DNA that would reveal the biological traces of successive waves of colonisers — Celts, Saxons, Vikings, etc. — in various parts of Britain. The findings showed that the Viking invasion of Britain was predominantly from Danish Vikings while the Orkney Islands were settled by Norwegian Vikings.

He is currently Head of the Cancer and Immunogenetics Laboratory in the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine at the University of Oxford. Research interests of the laboratory include the fundamental genetics and biology of colorectal cancer.

Honours and awards

Lectures

In 1984 Bodmer was invited to deliver the Royal Institution Christmas Lecture on The Message of the Genes.

External links

References

  1. The Times 10 January 2009, Retrieved 2010-01-09
  2. Retrieved 2010-12-04
  3. http://forum.stanford.edu/wiki/index.php/Early_Computers_at_Stanford
  4. Conversation with Walter Bodmer, San Francisco, 4 Dec.2010
  5. http://www.hugo-international.org/abt_hugopresidents.php
  6. "Fellows of the Royal Society". Royal Society. Retrieved 12 September 2013. 
  7. "Honorary Graduates 1989 to present". bath.ac.uk. University of Bath. Retrieved 18 February 2012. 
Academic offices
Preceded by
The Duchess of York
Chancellor of the University of Salford
19952005
Succeeded by
Professor Sir Martin Harris
Preceded by
Christopher Zeeman
Principal of Hertford College, Oxford
1996–2005
Succeeded by
John Landers
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