Name Margarita Salas | ||
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Awards L'Oreal-UNESCO Awards for Women in Science People also search for Joanne Chory, Valerie Mizrahi, Tuneko Okasaki, Eugenia Del Pino |
Margarita Salas Falgueras, 1st Marquise of Canero (born 30 November 1938), commonly known as Margarita Salas, is a well-known Spanish scientist in the fields of Biochemistry, and Molecular genetics.
Contents
- Margarita salas la ciencia es la base del desarrollo del pais
- Life
- Scientific career
- Scientific activity
- Awards
- References

Margarita salas la ciencia es la base del desarrollo del pais
Life

Salas was born in Canero (Asturias), Spain. She graduated in chemistry at the Complutense University of Madrid and obtained a PhD degree in 1961, with as supervisor Alberto Sols (CSIC). In 1967, she travelled to the United States to work with Severo Ochoa. Salas, with her husband Eladio Viñuela, have been responsible for promoting Spanish research in the field of biochemistry and molecular biology. She has supervised more than 40 PhD-students, and has published over 200 scientific articles. She works as a professor at the CSIC in the field of Biotechnology.

Salas won the L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards for Women in Science in 2000.

Salas is a member of Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences, European Academy of Sciences and Arts, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Academy of Microbiology, United States National Academy of Sciences, and the Severo Ochoa Foundation.

Salas was elected to Seat i of the Real Academia Española on 20 December 2001, she took up her seat on 4 June 2003.
On 11 July 2008, Salas was raised into the Spanish nobility by King Juan Carlos I with the hereditary title of Marquesa de Canero (English: Marquise of Canero).
Scientific career
Early work
Once graduated in Chemistry, Margarita Salas joined the laboratory of Alberto Sols, pioneer of biochemistry in Spain. Under the direction of Sols, she made her doctoral thesis on the anomeric specificity of glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, and once completed, she went to the United States for four years (1963-1967) to work as a researcher at the University of New York with Severo Ochoa.
Bacterial virus Φ29 DNA polymerase
Among its major scientific contributions, stands out the directionality determination of genetic information reading during her time in the laboratory anyone of Severo Ochoa, and the discovery and characterization of Φ29 phage DNA polymerase, which has multiple biotechnological applications due to its high DNA amplification ability. More recently (2012), she is professor Ad Honorem at the Center for Molecular Biology Severo Ochoa, CSIC’s research center and the Autonomous University of Madrid, where she still works on the bacterial virus Φ29, useful in biotechnology research and which infects a non-pathogenic bacterium Bacillus subtilis.
Scientific activity
Margarita Salas has in her résumé more than 350 publications in international journals or books and about 10 in nationals. She also has 8 patents, and has given 400 lectures.