History of Genetics
History of Genetics
History of Genetics
The origins of genetics lie in the development of theories of evolution. It was in 1858 that the
origin of species and how species variability was developed after the research work of Charles
Darwin and Wallace. They described how new species arose via evolution and how natural
selection occurred to evolve new forms. They however did not know the role genes had to play
in this phenomenon.
Around the same time Gregor Mendel, an Austrian monk, was performing extensive experiments
on inheritance and genetics of sweet pea plants. He described the unit of heredity as a particle
that does not change and is passed on to offspring. His work is in fact the basis of understanding
the principles of genetics even today. Consequently, Gregor Mendel is known as the Father of
Genetics. There was, however, little awareness of Gregor’s work during this time.
Also in this period Haeckel correctly predicted that the heredity material was located in the
nucleus. Miescher showed the material in the nucleus was a nucleic acid. Chromosomes as units
carrying genetic information was also discovered around this time.
Then came methods like PCR (Polymerase chain reaction) and host of other biotechnology
methods and new applications were found in medicine, pharmacotherapeutics as well as
research.
Mid to Late 19th Century: Evolution, Natural Selection, Particulate Inheritance and
Nuclein 1858
Darwin and Wallace - Role of natural variation and natural selection in evolution
1865 - Gregor Mendel - Particulate inheritance
1866 - Ernst Haeckel; Heredity materials was in the nucleus
1871 - Friedrich Miescher; Material in the nucleus was a nucleic acid
Early 20th Century: Mendelian Principles are extended and the Chromosomal Theory of
Inheritance solidifies
Mid 20th Century: DNA is the stuff of life; the preeminence of the Darwinian theory of
evolution via natural selection is confirmed
1928 - Griffith - Transformation experiments
1944 - Avery, MacLeod, McCarty - Definitive proof that DNA is the genetic material
1953 - Watson and Crick - DNA structure is defined
1954-1961
DNA code is determined
Transcription is described
Replication is described
Translation is described
Operons are discovered
1932-1953
Fisher and Dobzhansky - The Modern Synthesis is formulated
Links Darwinian evolutionary theory and Mendelian genetics
1968
Kimura
Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is introduced
Mid-late 20th Century and the Early 21st Century: The Age of Molecular Genetics;
Phylogenetics Studies Intensive; The Information Age; The Emergence of Genomics
Science