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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1995
Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric F. Wieschaus
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1995
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Edward B. Lewis
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard
Eric F. Wieschaus
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard
Born: 20 October 1942, Magdeburg, Germany
Affiliation at the time of the award: Max-Planck-Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, Tübingen, Federal Republic of Germany
Prize motivation: "for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development"

Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard – Autobiography
I was born during the war, on October 20,
1942, as the second of five children. My father, Rolf Volhard,
was an architect. He was the eighth of ten children of Franz
Volhard, a professor of medicine in Frankfurt, and specialist for
heart and kidney. My mother's mother, Lies Haas-Möllmann,
was a painter but had given up her career for her family. I
remember her well, because I visited her frequently during Easter
vacation in her apartment in Heidelberg. She was a remarkable
woman of strong discipline and character, who interested me very
much. Her paintings and drawings are very beautiful,
impressionist style, and show a great eye. I do not remember my
other grandparents. Both my father and mother were from families
with many children, and I once counted and found that I have 33
cousins! Most of my relatives lived rather close to us in
Frankfurt, or Heidelberg, so I know most of them reasonably well,
with some I am good friends.
We lived in a flat in the south of Frankfurt, with a rather large
garden, close to the forest. I had a happy childhood, with many
stimulations and support from my parents who, in postwar times,
when it was difficult to buy things, made children's books and
toys for us. We had much freedom and were encouraged by our
parents to do interesting things. I remember that my father
showed much interest in what we did, and thereby had a great
influence in our performances, without being particularly
ambitious (although good grades at school were more or less a
matter of course). I tried to explain to him what we did in
mathematics, and we discussed Goethe's scientific papers. My
mother had great social talents and a very good way of taking
care of children, and other people who needed help, in an
unassuming and practical way. Both my parents were good
musicians, and painted, so we kids did that too, with much
pleasure and support. I learned to play the flute, but, although
I tried hard, I never drew as well as my sisters and my brother.
When we grew up we did not have much money, so we learned to sew
our own dresses, and generally were educated to make things we
could make ourselves, rather than buying them, or finding other
people to make them for us. One sister and my brother are
architects, another sister studied music, and the youngest sister
studied to be an arts teacher. We have been and are still very
close.
I remember that already as a child I was often intensely
interested in things, obsessed by ideas and projects in many
areas, and in these topics I learned much on my own, reading
books. Early on I was interested in plants and animals, I think I
knew at the age of twelve at the latest that I wanted to be a
biologist. As a small child I had spent several vacations on a
farm in a little village, the refuge of my grandparents in the
last year of the war. I have very fond memories of these visits,
the people were very kind and allowed me to help with the animals
and with harvesting, and the food was wonderful. I loved our
garden and kept some pets, but I missed having someone
knowledgeable in plants and animals, who could explain things to
me, so I tried to find out much by myself, and from books. Within
my family I was the only one with lasting interests in sciences.
This was supported by my parents by giving me the right books,
and by my brother and sisters by listening to my tales and
theories.
I enjoyed high school where I learned a lot from excellent
teachers. As I was lazy and rarely did my homework, I finished
high school with a rather mediocre exam. I almost did not pass in
English language. Recently, my previous teachers allowed me to
see their report on my high school performances, which included
the following statements: Despite the fact that her talents
are rather equally spread among many areas of knowledge, her
performances are rather different depending on the distribution
of her interests. Thus, with her strong display of self will she
can be decidedly lazy in some topics over years, while in her
areas of interests she performs to a degree far extending that
required for normal school purposes. Thereby she gets into
increasing difficulties and a certain nervosity, because she
simply cannot cope with everything she would and should like to
perform, and then loses stamina. On the other hand, the
statement also acknowledges that she is gifted above average,
has a critical and qualified judgement, and the talent for
independent scientific work. Luckily, school education was
good and interesting, particularly German literature, mathematics
and biology. We had very engaged teachers, mostly women. In the
final class our biology teacher discussed many modern topics with
us such as genetics, evolution, and animal behavior. I remember
that I tried to develop a new theory about evolution, when we
discussed Darwin at school. For the celebration of our Abitur, at
the end of high school, I gave a speech "On language of animals"
(Sprache bei Tieren). This speech was the result of reading of
Konrad Lorenz and other German
biologists on animal behavior that interested and still interests
me much.
My father died suddenly on the day of my high school exam, 26th
of February, 1962. At the time I finished high school, I was
determined to study biology, deeply convinced to eventually be a
researcher. I had briefly considered studying medicine, because
of its relevance to mankind. To find out whether I could be
attracted to studying medicine, I did a one month course as a
nurse in a hospital. This experience greatly supported my
conviction not to become a doctor.
Initially I was disappointed by the university and missed school,
and my friends at school. I also was rather shy and found it
quite difficult to design my curriculum on my own and get to know
fellow students. The courses in biology in Frankfurt University
were quite dull at the time, it seemed that I knew the more
exciting things already, and what was new was boring, although
there was one course in botany which I enjoyed. Soon I discovered
physics, by an excellent series of lectures by Martienssen, a
professor of experimental physics in Frankfurt. I also did
courses in mathematics and theoretical mechanics which fascinated
me for a year, until I found these topics too difficult. Via the
class in chemistry I got reminded of my true interests in
biology. At that time (Summer 1964) a new curriculum for
biochemistry, the only one of its kind in Germany, was started in
Tübingen, and I made up my mind quickly, and went there to
study biochemistry, leaving family and friends behind. Being a
student in Tübingen, a very lovely old town, was fun. I
lived close to the market place, right across from the best movie
theater. Rather primitive, but pretty, no shower, cold water, no
central heating, but everybody I knew lived like that and it was
quite romantic. My friends were largely language students,
studying Latin, and Rumanian, and English language. I did not
like the biochemistry curriculum very much, too much organic
chemistry, too little biology. But on the whole it was a good
thing to do, because it provided a very solid training in many
basic courses, such as physical chemistry with thermodynamics,
and stereochemistry, which I liked. In the final year two new
professors taught microbiology and genetics, which I liked very
much, and I also had a chance to attend seminars and lectures
from scientists of the Max-Planck-Institut für
Virusforschung, Gerhard Schramm, Alfred Gierer, Friedrich
Bonhoeffer, Heinz Schaller, and others. They were teaching very
modern things such as protein biosynthesis and DNA replication.
This excited me much although I hardly understood the lectures at
the time. I did my exams for the Diploma in biochemistry in 1969,
as usual for me, with rather mediocre grades because I had not
always paid attention, and often had lost interest.
From Heinz Schaller with whom I did my Diploma work I got my
first real training in a laboratory. I was his first graduate
student and very keen. Heinz is a chemist, and taught me to think
in quantitative terms, yields, completeness of reactions, he is
an excellent experimenter. My first thesis project on the
comparison of DNA sequences of small phages by RNA-DNA
hybridisation was given up, after the realization that it would
involve predominantly the refinement of techniques, with
uncertain success. I finally developed a new method for large
scale purification of very clean RNA polymerase, and, in
collaboration with another graduate student and friend, Bertold
Heyden, isolated RNA polymerase binding sites from fd Phage in
order to understand the structure of a promoter. We determined
the composition of the strongest binding site and found it to be
rather different from that of other sites such as the strongest
of ØX 174 and the second strongest from fd. At the time DNA
sequencing was not easily possible, so we characterized the
sequences by their oligopyrimidine pattern, for which we had
developed a new and simple method. It was a quite interesting
story which got published as a letter to NATURE.
Although I was an experienced molecular biologist, I got bored
with my projects at the end of my thesis (1973). The prospect of
continuing the study of transcriptional control via the structure
of promoter regions meant developing new methods for DNA
sequencing. The field of recombinant DNA technology was growing
and a fellow student and good friend, Peter Seeburg, argued
strongly for it. I was sceptical, and at that early time, like
most other people in Tübingen, did not foresee its powers.
At that time, the Max-Planck-Institutes in Tübingen were
interesting places. Wolfgang Beermann and Alfred Gierer taught
courses in cell and molecular biology. The
Friedrich-Miescher-Laboratory was founded, with Friedrich
Bonhoeffer, Günther Gerisch and Rolf Knippers as first group
leaders. In the laboratory of Alfred Gierer, people were studying
regeneration processes in Hydra. Gierer and Hans Meinhardt, a
theoretician, developed their gradient model explaining self
organisation of polarity from initial fluctuations by lateral
inhibition. Although I was far from understanding the model, I
realized how interesting the problem of pattern formation was. I
looked around and sought advise from two of the hydra people, the
American postdocs Hans Bode and Charles David. I also started
reading textbooks such as the lectures on developmental biology
by Alfred Kühn. Another strong influence came from the work
of Friedrich Bonhoeffer in molecular genetics. Friedrich studied
DNA replication in E.coli at the time. He performed a
genetic screen for mutations affecting replication, using quite
sophisticated and elegant methods to make it work with large
numbers and high efficiency. His work, which resulted in the
identification of the gene encoding the replicating DNA
polymerase and a number of other novel genes, convinced me of the
powers of genetics in analysing complex processes. I looked
around for an organism in which genetics could be applied to
developmental problems, and found the descriptions of the early
Drosophila mutants, including bicaudal, in a review
by Ted Wright (1971). Further, the description of the first
rescue experiments of a maternal mutant was published by Garen
and Gehring in 1972.
I read and thought and discussed, and finally decided as a
postdoctoral project to score for mutations affecting the
informational content of the egg cell, with the aim of using them
to isolate and identify morphogens in injection assays, in which
the rescue of a mutant phenotype was indicative of the presence
of an activity lacking in the mutant embryo, possibly the gene
product. The only interesting maternal mutant known at that time
was bicaudal, which had been discovered by Alice Bull, and
described in 1966. Mutant embryos display mirror image
duplications of the abdomen, a spectacular and very puzzling
phenomenon, which however showed little penetrance. I met Walter
Gehring at a meeting in 1973 in Freiburg, and had the courage to
ask him about bicaudal, and whether he would let me work
in his laboratory in Basel. I went there at the beginning of
1975, supported by a long term EMBO fellowship.
I immediately loved working with flies. They fascinated me, and
followed me around in my dreams. Basel and the Biozentrum was a
very good place to spend ones postdoctoral times. I met Eric Wieschaus who just had finished his thesis
in Walter Gehring's lab. His thesis project on the origin of
imaginal disc cells in the blastoderm interested me very much. I
learned a great deal about the use of genetics to study
development in discussions with Eric. I also learned to have
conversations with my fellow postdocs in English, and enjoyed the
Swiss language and the lovely old town. It was difficult to be a
beginner in everything, after having been an expert in almost
everything in the previous lab. Soon after I started as a
postdoc, most people in the Gehring lab began to work on
recombinant DNA and molecular biology with the aim to clone
developmentally interesting genes. Spyros Artavanis, Paul Schedl
and David Ish Horowicz were postdocs at the same time. Eric, soon
after I came, left for Zurich to do a postdoc in the lab of Rolf
Nöthiger, but continued his collaboration with two postdocs
in the lab on the transplantation of pole cells in order to
investigate the female germline in chimeras. Jeanette Holden, an
excellent geneticist who had done her thesis with David Suzuki on
dominant temperature sensitive mutations taught me genetics of
Drosophila. The problem of studying embryonic mutants at
the time was that the methods for collecting eggs and inspecting
embryos were both tedious and unsatisfactory. It was hard to see
structures, segments, and their polarity in the living embryo,
and fixation and clearing methods were not available. With the
help and support of Jeanette Holden and David Ish Horowicz, we
developed some tricks which proved helpful in scoring mutant
embryos from many lines. The most important of them, the block
system for egg collection and replica plating in flies is my
first Drosophila publication, in Drosophila
Information Service, 1977. With Jitse van der Meer, we developed
a fixation and clearing technique which enabled the scoring of
the larval cuticle in great detail. Using these techniques, I
recovered and investigated the original bicaudal mutant. I
also did a small screen for maternal mutants which was successful
in that it taught me how difficult such a screen was to do on a
large scale. In this screen of 100 chromosomes, a maternal mutant
which later was found to be immensely interesting, C79, later
called dorsal, was isolated. I did a detailed study of
bicaudal, the most difficult mutant I ever studied, with
unbelievable patience and in retrospect little reward. I
published a paper on bicaudal, but I did not easily find a
job.
With a fellowship from the DFG I went for a year (1977) to work
in Freiburg in the lab of the famous insect embryologist Klaus
Sander. Klaus Sander had been the first to describe gradients in
the insect egg. He had done elegant experiments in which he
translocated a symbiont ball localized to the posterior pole in a
leaf hopper embryo and thereby changed the polarity and pattern
over large distances of the egg. In Freiburg, with Margit
Schardin, we did a fate map for the larval cuticle using laser
ablations of Drosophila blastoderm cells. This experiment
was important in showing that the primordia of individual
segments in the blastoderm stage were no more than three cells
wide. It also led to a very detailed examination and description
of the segmental pattern of the Drosophila larva which we
later used in our screens. I continued the work on dorsal,
discovered the recessive phenotype and interpreted the phenotype
postulating a gradient determining the dorsoventral axis. At that
time, gradients were not widely accepted as mechanisms, in
particular biochemists were highly sceptical, however the
Tübingen influence made such models attractive to me. I
presented this and the bicaudal work at the annual
symposium of the American Society of Developmental Biology in
Madison in 1978, my first trip to the US. Pedro Santamaria, a
postdoc with whom I shared the lab in Freiburg, was a skillful
transplantation person, he did some attempts to rescue the
dorsal phenotype by transplantation of wildtype cytoplasm.
We could not see much of an effect, but later in Heidelberg I
looked at the preps again with a better microscope and found that
there was some rescue! Unfortunately by that time Pedro was back
in Paris and I had lots of other things to do - so this story had
to wait - it finally got published 5 years later.
Both Eric and I got a job offer from John Kendrew, the
director general of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in
Heidelberg, that was newly founded and recruiting in many areas.
We both accepted and worked there for three years, 1978-1980. I
had applied to the EMBL earlier, but at that time they did not
think I could establish a fly group alone. When our joint offer
came, we were very pleased, because we could imagine that it
would be fun to share a lab, and at least I did not have another
option. Eric and I always had kept in touch, while I was in Basel
and Freiburg and he in Zurich, and we used to discuss our
experiments together. I felt at the time that Eric was much more
successful than I, he was extremely productive during his time in
Zurich, and worked on many very original projects, germ line,
cell lineage, sex determination, where not many people could
follow him. I also had the impression that I was dependent on him
because he had more fly experience and without him I would not
have gotten the job. This made our start in Heidelberg a little
difficult, until we sorted things out, and from then on we
thoroughly enjoyed working in the same lab. It was tiny - we,
although both group leaders, shared a technician, Hildegard
Kluding, and a stock keeper who also did cuticle preps for us.
Initially we both had our own projects which we tried to pursue
independently (while discussing them all the time). Soon we
realised that the problems of close proximity and in sharing a
technician would be eased if we let Hildegard do projects that
interested us both. One of our first joint projects was the
analysis of Krüppel, a segmentation mutant which we
found published in a textbook by Alfred Kühn. It had
originally been described in 1950 by Hans Gloor, who, in Geneva,
still kept the stock and sent it to us. We let Hildegard do most
of the Krüppel experiments. Our collection of mutants
affecting segment number increased, tempting us to do a "shelf"
screen. In the cuticle preps of embryos produced by our stock
collection (we took from the shelf) we found a number of
interesting and novel phenotypes. Gary Struhl, then a graduate
student with Peter Lawrence in Cambridge, showed us homozygous
Antennapedia, and wingless embryo preparations,
which were very exciting. We realized that the screening for
embryonic mutants would be very rewarding, and that we were the
only people in the world who could do it. In contrast, the screen
for maternals, which I was trying to work out at that time, was
much more difficult, because it requires an additional generation
and selection system. We invented some more tricks such as the
little nets to fix and clear embryos from 7 mutants at the same
time, and did the first screen, for zygotic mutants on the second
chromosome, just Eric and I, supported by Hildegard and a second
technician. The screen of 4200 second chromosomes took no more
than three months (autumn 1979). It was extremely exciting - no
major disasters, hard work, and great fun. Early on it was
already evident that the screen was a success, and early on we
realized the pair rule, the strange skipping of portions from
every other segment ("2-4-6-8-type"). We had seen the mirror
images displayed by the segment polarity mutants ("gooseberry
type") before, also the "notch type" - the neuralized mutants. As
a side project we grew up the homozygous flies from the 1000 or
so non lethal lines and tested their fertility, and the fertility
of their daughters (to screen for grandchildless mutants). We
recovered torso, gurken and tudor, three very
valuable maternal mutants in this screen. We also, by chance,
found the first Toll, BicD and easter
allele. At the end of the screen Gary Struhl, and somewhat later
Gerd Jürgens joined us, very stimulating, critical and
knowledgeable discussants. We sorted things out, owing to the
very competent help of Hildegard and the stock keepers, in a very
short time, and decided, after some debates whether to wait until
the screens of the other two chromosomes had been done as well,
to try to publish the essential conclusions on the segmentation
genes in an article in Nature. Although there were not many
people working close enough to be competing with us, people
started to get interested in this type of mutants, and although
we certainly had the most complete collection, reports on
individual mutants where probably able to spoil much of the fun
for us. The paper was published in October 1980, with a very
pretty cover picture, in NATURE.
We continued with the screens of the two other chromosomes, with
Gerd Jürgens who, as a very skillful and experienced
geneticist, organized the third chromosomal screen. We even got a
little bit more space and an extra "Denkzimmer" (office space),
but on the whole the EMBL of that time, with its strong emphasis
on expensive high tech experimental set ups, was not the best
place for us, and sometimes it struck us how strange it was to
discover very exciting things and know at the same time that
there was not a single person in the entire institute outside of
our lab who would appreciate it. There was one other laboratory
working with Drosophila, they tried to develop cloning
techniques and finally cloned an eye colour gene, white.
Admittedly, we also did not have great interest in what other
people were doing at the EMBL, it was so far from our work and we
had so little time, but we enjoyed the international atmosphere
and were good citizens of the place. We had very good working
conditions, as people at the EMBL had them, and we used our great
chance - we could not have been more successful - but the people
who had given us this chance were unable to realize this. Eric
even before finishing the first screen started to apply for jobs
in the US, and got an offer in Princeton for work he had done
before the screen. I got an extension to my contract for another
three years, but felt uncomfortable to stay at the EMBL without
Eric. Luckily I got an offer for a junior position at the
Friedrich-Miescher-Laboratory of the Max-Planck-Society in
Tübingen and moved there in spring 1981.
The FML consists of four groups, the groupleaders stay for not
longer than six years, and are entirely free in their research
topics. They have a generous budget, enough space and no teaching
obligations. Great conditions and a great challenge. At the time
I was there, I much enjoyed the interactions with the groups of
Rolf Kemler and Walter Birchmeier, and, in the last year, Peter
Ekblom. I was lucky because Gerd Jürgens came along and soon
we were joined by Kathryn Anderson as a postdoc. Kathryn wanted
to work on dorsal and pursue the rescue experiments. Both
Gerd and Kathryn are excellent geneticists with whom it was an
intellectual challenge and pleasure to collaborate. In 1982 we
did the large scale screen for maternal mutants on the third
chromosome in which many of the genes involved in axis
determination, including bicoid, and oskar and most
of the dorsal-group genes were identified. Gerd, whose
interest was to look for maternal homeotic mutations, prepared
the screen that involved an elegant crossing scheme proposed by
Gary Struhl. As students, Hans Georg Frohnhöfer and Ruth
Lehmann started during the first year. Hans Georg initially did
pole cell transplantations to investigate the maternal
contribution of several zygotic mutants, he later worked on
bicoid. Ruth had worked with Campos Ortega before on the
neurogenic genes, she already had much knowledge on fly
embryology. All were very enthusiastic and made a great team.
However, the technicians in Tübingen enjoyed the fly work
decidedly less than those in Heidelberg, and we had some
difficult times getting food and keeping the stocks, owing to
that. But soon we got efficient help from undergraduate students,
some of whom came to us via lab courses we taught during the
university vacations.
The maternal screen was much harder than the screens we had done
before. It was also a difficult task to divide up the work
between the people, as the importance of the individual mutants
only became clear following rather detailed studies. The obvious
groups of phenotypes were readily analyzed, what was more
difficult was to take care of all the other mutants (more than
300 total) we had collected. After several attempts to sort those
out, we decided to concentrate on the maternal mutants involved
in axis determination, and not complete the genetical and
phenotypical characterisation of the entire collection. Gerd and
I still had to finish some of the projects on segmentation
mutants, including the papers on the zygotic screens done in
Heidelberg, which finally got published in three papers in Roux
archives in 1984.
For the phenotypical and genetical analysis, the maternal
mutants, soon including the ones on the second chromosome Trudi
Schüpbach and Eric Wieschaus had isolated, were divided into
phenotypic groups, which roughly corresponded to the four systems
of axis determination defined later. Kathryn Anderson, later
Siegfried Roth and Dave Stein, studied the dorsal group
genes including cactus, Ruth Lehmann concentrated on the
posterior group, and Hans Georg Frohnhöfer on the anterior
mutants. Initially he also worked on the genes torso and
torsolike, which he recognized as acting independently of
the anterior group of genes. Martin Klingler concentrated, later,
on this terminal group. An important method to analyse the
function of the genes we used in my laboratory was cytoplasmic
transplantation. These experiments were very successful. Kathryn
Anderson showed that among the dorsal-group genes in many
cases the RNA was the rescuing principle. Hans Georg and Ruth
discovered localisation of activities with long range effects at
the anterior and posterior pole of the egg. These studies were
started with the mutants bicoid and oskar, but also
extended to wildtype embryos. A first model describing the three
independent systems involved in establishing the anteroposterior
axis was presented in an article in SCIENCE, with Frohnhöfer
and Lehmann, in 1987. At the time the first Drosophila
segmentation genes had been cloned and found to encode
transcription factors. The first gap gene, Krüppel,
was cloned in the group of Herbert Jäckle, who had a small
independent research group in the neighboring Max-Planck-Institut
für Entwicklungsbiologie (formerly Virusforschung, the
institute in which I had done my PhD). In my lab, molecular
analysis was begun rather late, as we felt it important to
investigate the properties of the individual genes as carefully
as possible before embarking in tedious molecular cloning, that
was not easy at the time.
In the meantime, I was appointed as director of an independent
division at the Max-Planck-Institut für
Entwicklungsbiologie, the position I am still holding. We moved
across the yard in 1986. The institute has four more directors,
working on cell biology, with frog (Peter Hausen) and
neuroembryology, with chick embryos (Alfred Gierer, Friedrich
Bonhoeffer and Uli Schwarz). My group got larger, and we started
doing molecular work, with the analysis of the localization of
the RNA of bicoid (cloned in the lab of Marcus Noll in
Basel). Wolfgang Driever as a graduate student made an antibody
against the bicoid protein and discovered the bicoid protein
gradient that determines, in a concentration dependent manner,
the expression pattern of other segmentation genes. Wolfgang
established many molecular methods in my lab, and subsequently
Frank Sprenger and Leslie Stevens cloned torso, followed
by Daniel St Johnston with the cloning of staufen, and
Robert Geisler's cloning of cactus. The improvements in
the techniques of visualisation of the gene products by in
situ hybridisation and antibody stainings complemented the
transplantation studies done earlier, resulting in several
exciting discoveries concerning the establishment of gradients in
the extracellular space and by nuclear localisation by Dave Stein
and Siegfried Roth. These investigations gradually lead to a more
comprehensive understanding of the principles of axis
determination in the embryo, presented first in a review in
DEVELOPMENT in 1990.
Already in 1984 or so - I got excited about the 1982 paper of
George Streisinger on Zebrafish, and at the side explored whether
zebrafish could eventually be established as a system for the
genetic analysis of vertebrate development. The basis for this
interest was the problem of generalisation, the question to what
extent our results could be applied to an understanding of
vertebrates including man. These early intentions to investigate
zebrafish were retarded significantly by the subsequent demanding
molecular studies on Drosophila, with the success that I
had not expected when, as early as 1986, I brought the first fish
tanks into the lab. Two graduate students, Stefan Schulte-Merker,
who started in 1988 and Matthias Hammerschmidt, were the first
fish people in the lab, and Nancy Hopkins from MIT spent a
sabbatical year with our fish and us. They and others who joined
later were very helpful in developing the tools for breeding and
keeping many stocks of fish with safety and efficiency. These
efforts resulted in the building of a fish house, with 7000
aquaria of our design, inaugurated in September 1992. Almost to
the day three years later we submitted for publication the
manuscripts describing 1200 zebrafish mutants, which a group of
twelve scientists, with a number of technicians and students, had
isolated in a large scale screen.
In my lab, we will continue working on the investigation of the
molecular mechanisms involved in the establishment of polarity in
the Drosophila embryo, as well as continue the exploration
of the zebrafish as a model for the study of vertebrate specific
features. We believe that the combination of several approaches
and systems in one laboratory provides a powerful basis for
further understanding of the development of complexity in the
life of an animal.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1995, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1996
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1995
MLA style: "Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1995/nusslein-volhard.html
