Marc W. Kirschner
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Marc Wallace Kirschner (born February 28, 1945) is an
American American(s) may refer to: * American, something of, from, or related to the United States of America, commonly known as the "United States" or "America" ** Americans, citizens and nationals of the United States of America ** American ancestry, pe ...
cell biologist and biochemist and the founding chair of the Department of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School. He is known for major discoveries in cell and developmental biology related to the dynamics and function of the cytoskeleton, the regulation of the cell cycle, and the process of signaling in embryos, as well as the evolution of the vertebrate body plan. He is a leader in applying mathematical approaches to biology. He is the John Franklin Enders University Professor at Harvard University. In 2021 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society.


Education and early life

Kirschner was born in Chicago, Illinois, on February 28, 1945. He graduated from Northwestern University with a B.A. in
chemistry Chemistry is the science, scientific study of the properties and behavior of matter. It is a natural science that covers the Chemical element, elements that make up matter to the chemical compound, compounds made of atoms, molecules and ions ...
in 1966. He received a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation in 1966 and earned a doctorate in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1971.


Career and research

He held postdoctoral positions at UC Berkeley and at the University of Oxford in England. He became assistant professor at Princeton University in 1972. In 1978 he was made professor at the University of California, San Francisco. In 1993, he moved to Harvard Medical School, where he served as the chair of the new Department of Cell Biology for a decade. He became the founding chair of the HMS Department of Systems Biology in 2003. He was named the
John Franklin Enders John Franklin Enders (February 10, 1897 – September 8, 1985) was an American biomedical scientist and Nobel Laureate. Enders has been called "The Father of Modern Vaccines." Life and education Enders was born in West Hartford, Connecticut on Fe ...
University Professor in 2009.Ireland
"Kirschner and King named University Professors"
''Harvard Gazette'', 23 July 2009 (retrieved 16 May 2012)
In 2018, he was succeeded as Chair of the Department of Systems Biology by Galit Lahav. Kirschner studies how cells divide, how they generate their shape, how they control their size, and how embryos develop. In his eclectic lab, developmental work on the frog coexists with biochemical work on mechanism of ubiquitination, cytoskeleton assembly or
signal transduction Signal transduction is the process by which a chemical or physical signal is transmitted through a cell as a series of molecular events, most commonly protein phosphorylation catalyzed by protein kinases, which ultimately results in a cellula ...
. At Princeton, his early work on microtubules established their unusual molecular assembly from tubulin proteins and identified the first microtubule-stabilizing protein tau, later shown to be a major component of the neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer's disease. In studies at UC San Francisco of the frog embryo as a model system of cell development, Kirschner identified the first inducer of embryonic differentiation, fibroblast growth factor (FGF), an early finding in the field of signal transduction. Kirschner's lab is also known for uncovering basic mechanisms of the cell cycle in eukaryotic cells. Working in Xenopus (frog) egg extracts, Kirschner and Andrew Murray showed that
cyclin Cyclin is a family of proteins that controls the progression of a cell through the cell cycle by activating cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) enzymes or group of enzymes required for synthesis of cell cycle. Etymology Cyclins were originally disco ...
synthesis drives the cell cycle and, later, that ubiquitin regulates levels of cyclin by marking the cell-cycle molecule for destruction. His lab discovered and purified many of the components involved in cell cycle progression, including anaphase promoting complex (APC), the complex that ubiquitinates cyclin B. A second noted finding was his discovery, with
Tim Mitchison Timothy John Mitchison is a cell biologist and systems biologist and Hasib Sabbagh Professor of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School in the United States. He is known for his discovery, with Marc Kirschner, of dynamic instability in microt ...
, of the dynamic instability of microtubules, In mitosis, for example, microtubules form the spindle that separates the chromosomes. The first step in spindle formation is the nucleation of microtubules by microtubule-organizing centers, which then grow in all directions. Microtubules that attach to a chromosome are stabilized and are therefore retained to form part of the spindle. Because of dynamic instability, some individual microtubules that are not stabilized are at risk of collapse (or “catastrophe” as Kirschner named it), allowing re-use of the tubulin monomers. This recognition of self-organization in biological systems has been highly influential, and helped shape the view of the cytoplasm as a collection of dynamic molecular machines. Kirschner is also interested in the evolutionary origins of the vertebrate body plan. Together with John Gerhart, he was instrumental in developing the acorn worm
Saccoglossus kowalevskii Hemichordata is a phylum which consists of triploblastic, enterocoelomate, and bilaterally symmetrical marine deuterostome animals, generally considered the sister group of the echinoderms. They appear in the Lower or Middle Cambrian and incl ...
into a model system that could be used to study the divergence between hemichordates and chordates, and the evolution of the chordate nervous system. Kirschner is a pioneer in using mathematical approaches to learn about central biological questions. For example, a model of the Wnt pathway he developed in collaboration with the late
Reinhart Heinrich Reinhart Heinrich (24 April 1946 – 23 October 2006) was a German biophysicist. He was professor at the Humboldt University of Berlin, and best known as one of the founders, with Tom Rapoport, of metabolic control theory in parallel with simi ...
showed that new properties and constraints emerge when the individual biochemical steps are combined into a complete pathway. A talk he gave on mathematics and the future of medicine at a retreat for Department Chairs at Harvard Medical School in 2003 inspired the Dean, Joseph B. Martin, to found a new Department, the Department of
Systems Biology Systems biology is the computational modeling, computational and mathematical analysis and modeling of complex biological systems. It is a biology-based interdisciplinary field of study that focuses on complex interactions within biological syst ...
, with Kirschner as founding chair. Since then, Kirschner's lab has attracted many students and post-docs from theoretical backgrounds who wish to make the transition into biology. His lab is now a leader in using mathematical tools to analyze signaling pathways, cell size control, and the selectivity of drugs. In two books co-authored with John Gerhart, Kirschner has described the cellular and developmental underpinnings of the evolution of organisms, and the concept of " evolvability". In the most recent book, Kirschner and Gerhart proposed a new theory of "facilitated variation" that aims to answer the question: How can small, random genetic changes be converted into useful changes in complex body parts?


Public service

Kirschner has been an advocate for federal biomedical research funding and served as first chair of the Joint Steering Committee for Public Policy, a coalition of scientific societies he helped create in 1993 to educate the U.S. Congress on biomedical research and lobby for public funding of it. In 2014, Kirschner (together with Bruce Alberts,
Shirley Tilghman Shirley Marie Tilghman, (; née Caldwell; born 17 September 1946) is a Canadian scholar in molecular biology and an academic administrator. She is now a professor of molecular biology and public policy and president emerita of Princeton Universi ...
and Harold Varmus) called for a number of changes to the system of US biomedical science, with the intention of reducing "hypercompetition" This publication led to the formation of an organization, Rescuing Biomedical Research, that aims to collect community input and propose changes to the structure of academic science in the USA. Kirschner helped launch the monthly, peer-reviewed journal '' PLoS Biology'' in October 2003 as a member of the editorial board and senior author of a paper in the inaugural issue. The journal was the first publishing venture from the San Francisco-based Public Library of Science (PLoS), which had begun three years previously as a grassroots organization of scientists advocating free and unrestricted access to the scientific literature


Books

* wit
John Gerhart
''Cells, Embryos, and Evolution: Toward a Cellular and Developmental Understanding of Phenotypic Variation and Evolutionary Adaptability'' ( Blackwell's, 1997) * wit
John Gerhart
''The Plausibility of Life: Resolving Darwin's Dilemma''

ale University Press 2005)


Awards and associations

* 1989–present - Member,
National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) is a United States nonprofit, non-governmental organization. NAS is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the Nati ...
* 1989–present - Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences * 1990-1991 - President, American Society for Cell Biology * 1991 -
Richard Lounsbery Award The Richard Lounsbery Award is given to American and French scientists, 45 years or younger, in recognition of "extraordinary scientific achievement in biology and medicine." The Award alternates between French and American scientists, and is aw ...
* 1996 - Public Service Award, American Society for Cell Biology * 1999–present - Foreign Member, Royal Society of London * 1999–present - Foreign Member, Academia Europaea * 2001 - William C. Rose Award, American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology * 2001 - Gairdner Foundation International Award (Canada) * 2003 - Rabbi Shai Shacknai Memorial Prize in Immunology and Cancer Research, Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem * 2003 -
E.B. Wilson Medal The E.B. Wilson Medal is the American Society for Cell Biology's highest honor for science and is presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for significant and far-reaching contributions to cell biology over the course of a career. It is name ...
, American Society for Cell Biology (the ASCB's highest honor) * 2004 - Dickson Prize for Science, Carnegie Mellon University * 2015 - Harvey Prize, Technion Institute, Israel.Harvey Prize 2015
/ref>


References


External links


Marc W. Kirschner, Ph.D., (Faculty page)
Harvard Department of Systems Biology.
Marc Kirschner
scientific publications list on Pubget. *.
Marc W. Kirschner's Seminar: "The Origin of Vertebrates"Video: "Systems questions in cell biology"
NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series, 17 October 2007. (Audio podcast also available.)
Video: Lecture on evolution
in Cambridge, Mass., 30 November 2005 taped by WGBH Forum Network. (Includes explanation of "facilitated variation.")
Marc Kirschner and John Gerhart: An email interview
by Gregg Ross on ''American Scientist Online'', November 2005.
Audio: Marc Kirschner interview in "Resolving Darwin's dilemma,"
''On Point'' radio show at WBUR Boston, 18 October 2005.
Plausibility of Life discussed in "Evolving Evolution,"
by Israel Rosenfield and Edward Ziff, ''New York Review of Books,'' 11 May 2006
Rescuing Biomedical Research website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kirschner, Marc 21st-century American biologists Jewish American scientists Foreign Members of the Royal Society Living people Members of Academia Europaea Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences Northwestern University alumni Systems biologists University of California, San Francisco faculty 1945 births Extended evolutionary synthesis Harvard Medical School faculty Richard-Lounsbery Award laureates Members of the American Philosophical Society 21st-century American Jews