Richard B. Flavell
Richard Flavell | |
---|---|
Born | Richard Bailey Flavell 11 October 1943 Birmingham, England |
Citizenship | UK |
Alma mater | University of Birmingham University of East Anglia |
Awards | FRS (1998) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Plant molecular genetics, Plant breeding |
Institutions | John Innes Centre |
Doctoral advisor | John Fincham[citation needed] |
Doctoral students | Jonathan D. G. Jones[citation needed] |
Richard Bailey Flavell CBE, FRS (born 11 October 1943) is a British molecular biologist, Chief Scientific Officer of Ceres, Inc., and was director of John Innes Centre from 1987 to 1998.[1]
Life
[edit]He was educated at the University of Birmingham (BSc, 1964 in Microbiology) and at the University of East Anglia (PhD, 1967 focused on the genetics of acetate utilization in Neurospora crassa). Following that he held a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1967–69 where he studied mitochondrial structure and function in Neurospora crassa. He then took up an appointment at the Plant Breeding Institute, Cambridge, in the Department of Cytogenetics under the leadership of Ralph Riley. In the following years he built up a team of plant molecular geneticists that was one of the first to clone plant DNA, to produce transgenic plants and to determine the structure of a plant mitochondrial genome.[citation needed]
Works
[edit]- Nicholas J. Brewin, Richard B. Flavell, "A cure for anemia in plants?", Nature Biotechnology 15, 222–223 (1997)
- Richard B Flavell, "A greener Revolution for All". Nature Biotechnology 34 1106–1110, 2016
References
[edit]- ^ 'FLAVELL, Dr Richard Bailey', Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014
- 1943 births
- Living people
- Alumni of the University of Birmingham
- Alumni of the University of East Anglia
- Academics of the University of East Anglia
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- Members of the European Molecular Biology Organization
- Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
- 20th-century British biologists
- 21st-century British biologists