Christiane Nusslein-Volhard is a famous Nobel Prize winning German biologist who studied genetic control of embryonic development in drosophila
@Researcher, Life Achievements and Family
Christiane Nusslein-Volhard is a famous Nobel Prize winning German biologist who studied genetic control of embryonic development in drosophila
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard born at
The details about her married life is quite unclear, however according to many Christiane was married for a short while and the marriage ended in divorce while she was still a young researcher. The surname Nusslein belongs to her husband.
Christiane Nusslein-Volhard was born on 20 October, 1942 in the German town of Magdeburg to architect Rolf Volhard and his wife Brigitte Hass Volhard. Although her father was an architect by trade he was also a musician in his own right; her mother was interested in painting.
Volhard was an exceptional student but she only performed well in the subjects in which she felt interested, that included science and German literature.
She graduated from school in the year 1962 and wanted to study biology; although medicine interested her as well. In order to decide on her course of action she enrolled in a month long nursing course and decided against studying medicine.
Till the year 1964, she dabbled between biology and physics trying to decide the best choice of career but she found biology boring while another course in physics turned out to be too tough after a point.
However when she came to know of a new course in biochemistry that was being taught at Tubingen and she joined the university.
In the year 1973, Nusslein met the famous developmental biologist Walter Gehring at a conference in Freiberg and she proposed the idea of working in his lab in Basel for her research. Two years later she moved to Basel to do post-doctoral research.
In the year 1978, the ‘European Molecular Biology Laboratory’ in Heidelberg, Germany appointed her as a group leader and there she was joined by American developmental biologist Eric Wieschaus.
During her time at the ‘European Molecular Biology Laboratory’ in Heidelberg, Germany, she conducted extensive genetic experiments on different varieties of flies and concluded that only 140 genes among the 20,000 that she studied were essential; thereby paving the way for the study of Drosophila mutants.
In the year 1981 she returned to ‘Friedrich Miescher Laboratory’ in Tubingen and continued her research on Drosophila mutants. Four years later she was appointed as the Director of the ‘Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology’, a position she holds till date.
In 1992, Nusslein started research on the developmental genes in zebra fish, since the embryo of these fishes have the characteristics of those in many other vertebrates. These findings of these studies have been regarded as some of the most important in genetics.
Christiane continues to make significant contribution to the field of genetics but undoubtedly her most important contribution would remain her study of the mutations in embryonic development in the drosophila. The studies provided crucial insights into how genetic mutation affects formation of complex multi-cellular structure from a single celled embryo.