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Often hidden from view, women have played a major role in the development of biotechnology and medicine. Indeed, women have been at the cutting edge of biotechnology, including Rosalind Franklin who played a fundamental role in deciphering the structure of DNA; Esther Lederberg who discovered the lambda phage which is now a major tool for studying gene regulation and genetic recombination; Margaret Dayhoff who developed the field of bioinformatics; Janet Mertz who created the first piece of recombinant DNA; and Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier who helped pioneer CRISPR, a revolutionary technique for genome editing.
Here we provide a number of profiles of women who have been key pioneers in biotechnology. These profiles have been compiled as part of an ongoing project to highlight the many contributions women have made to biotechnology. This is a work in progress and we welcome suggestions for other women to be included. Don't hesitate to contact us if you think of other women who have played an important role in the development of biotechnology and who are not here.
June Almeida - Born: Glasgow. Almeida has recently attracted a great deal of media attention in the midst of the COVID crisis as the person responsible for the first visualisation of a human coronavirus. Yet, this barely scratches the surface of her achievements. Leaving school at the age of 16, Almeida managed to forge a major career based on her outstanding skills in electron microscopy. This she did in the midst of bearing a daughter and raising her as a single parent following divorce.
Almeida's pioneering advances in immune electron microscopy put her at the forefront of many key breakthroughs in virology in the s and s. Learn more about June Almeida. Brigitte Askonas - Born: Vienna, Austria. Askonas co-developed one of the first systems for the cloning of antibody-forming B cells in vivo, some of the earliest monoclonal antibodies.