Discoveries in Genetics

  • Natural Selection

    Natural Selection
    Charles Darwin wrote “On the Origin of Species by Means of
    Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favored Races in the
    Struggle for Life.”
  • Discovery: Heredity Transmitted in Units

    Discovery: Heredity Transmitted in Units
    Gregor Mendel’s experiments on peas demonstrate that
    heredity is transmitted in discrete units. The understanding
    that genes remain distinct entities even if the characteristics
    of parents appear to blend in their children explains how
    natural selection could work and provides support for
    Darwin’s proposal.
  • Discovery: DNA Isolated

    Discovery: DNA Isolated
    Frederick Miescher isolates DNA from cells for the first time
    and calls it “nuclein”.
  • Discovery: Mitosis Described

    Discovery: Mitosis Described
    Walter Flemming describes chromosome behavior during
    animal cell division. He stains chromosomes to observe them
    clearly and describes the whole process of mitosis in 1882.
  • Discovery: Chromosome Theory of Inheritance

    Discovery: Chromosome Theory of Inheritance
    Walter Sutton observes that the segregation of chromosomes
    during meiosis matched the segregation pattern of Mendel’s
  • Discovery: The Word Gene is Coined

    Discovery: The Word Gene is Coined
    Wilhelm Johannsen coins the word “gene” to describe the
    Mendelian unit of heredity. He also uses the terms genotype
    and phenotype to differentiate between the genetic traits of an
    individual and its outward appearance.
  • Discovery: Chromosomes Carry Genes

    Discovery: Chromosomes Carry Genes
    Thomas Hunt Morgan and his students study fruit fly
    chromosomes. They show that chromosomes carry genes, and
    also discover genetic linkage.
  • Discovery: One Gene, One Enzyme Hypothesis

    Discovery: One Gene, One Enzyme Hypothesis
    George Beadle and Edward Tatum’s experiments on the red
    bread mold, Neurospora crassa, show that genes act by
    regulating distinct chemical events. They propose that each
    gene directs the formation of one enzyme
  • Discovery: DNA Has a Regular Periodic Structure

    Discovery: DNA Has a Regular Periodic Structure
    William Astbury, a British scientist, obtains the first X-ray
    diffraction pattern of DNA, which reveals that DNA must
    have a regular periodic structure. He suggests that nucleotide
    bases are stacked on top of each other.
  • Discovery: Jumping Genes

    Discovery: Jumping Genes
    Barbara McClintock, using corn as the model organism,
    discovers that genes can move around on chromosomes. This
    shows that the genome is more dynamic than previously
    thought. These mobile gene units are called transposons and
    are found in many species.