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Svante Pääbo

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Nationality
  
Sweden

Role
  
Biologist

Alma mater
  
Uppsala University

Parents
  
Sune Bergstrom


Known for
  
Paleogenetics

Education
  
Uppsala University

Name
  
Svante Paabo

Fields
  
Genetics

Svante Paabo Top 17 suitable quotes by svante paabo image French

Born
  
20 April 1955 (age 69) Stockholm, Sweden (
1955-04-20
)

Institutions
  
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

Notable awards
  
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize (1992) Member of the Order of the Pour le Merite, civil class (2008) Kistler Prize (2009) Great Cross of Merit with star (2009) Gruber Prize in Genetics (2013) Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences (2016)

Books
  
Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes, How the E19 Protein of Adenoviruses Modulates the Immune System

Awards
  
Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences

Similar People
  
Sune Bergstrom, Karl Deisseroth, Ian Agol

A neandertal view of human origin svante p bo


Svante Pääbo (born 20 April 1955) is a Swedish biologist specializing in evolutionary genetics. One of the founders of paleogenetics, he has worked extensively on the Neanderthal genome. Since 1997, he has been director of the Department of Genetics at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

Contents

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Education and early life

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Pääbo was born in Stockholm and grew up with his mother, Estonian chemist Karin Pääbo. He barely knew his father, biochemist Sune Bergström, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Bengt I. Samuelsson and John R. Vane in 1982. He earned his PhD from Uppsala University in 1986 for research investigating how the E19 protein of adenoviruses modulates the immune system.

Research and career

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Pääbo is known as one of the founders of paleogenetics, a discipline that uses the methods of genetics to study early humans and other ancient populations. In 1997, Pääbo and colleagues reported their successful sequencing of Neanderthal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), originating from a specimen found in Feldhofer grotto in the Neander valley.

Svante Pääbo Svante Paabo The 2007 TIME 100 TIME

In August 2002, Pääbo's department published findings about the "language gene", FOXP2, which is lacking or damaged in some individuals with language disabilities.

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In 2006, Pääbo announced a plan to reconstruct the entire genome of Neanderthals. In 2007, he was named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people of the year.

Svante Pääbo Svante Pbo DNA clues to our inner neanderthal TED Talk TEDcom

In February 2009, at the Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago, it was announced that the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology had completed the first draft version of the Neanderthal genome. Over 3 billion base pairs were sequenced in collaboration with the 454 Life Sciences Corporation. This project, led by Pääbo, will shed new light on the recent evolutionary history of modern humans.

In March 2010, Pääbo and his coworkers published a report about the DNA analysis of a finger bone found in the Denisova Cave in Siberia; the results suggest that the bone belonged to an extinct member of the genus Homo that had not yet been recognized, the Denisova hominin.

In May 2010, Pääbo and his colleagues published a draft sequence of the Neanderthal genome in the journal Science. He and his team also concluded that there was probably interbreeding between Neanderthals and Eurasian (but not Sub-Saharan African) humans. There is growing support in the scientific community for this theory of admixture between archaic and anatomically-modern humans, though some archaeologists remain skeptical about this conclusion.

In 2014, he published the book Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes where he in the mixed form of a memoir and popular science tells the story of the research effort to map the Neanderthal genome combined with thought on human evolution.

Awards and honours

In 1992, he received the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, which is the highest honour awarded in German research. Pääbo was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 2000. In October 2009 the Foundation For the Future announced that Pääbo had been awarded the 2009 Kistler Prize for his work isolating and sequencing ancient DNA, beginning in 1984 with a 2,400-year-old mummy. In June 2010 the Federation of European Biochemical Societies (FEBS) awarded him the Theodor Bücher Medal for outstanding achievements in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. In 2013, he received Gruber Prize in Genetics for ground breaking research in evolutionary genetics. In June 2015 he was awarded the degree of DSc (honoris causa) at NUI Galway. He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 2016.

References

Svante Pääbo Wikipedia