Dr. John Craig Venter (born 1946)

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John Craig Venter (born October 14, 1946) is an American biotechnologist and businessman. He is known for leading the first draft sequence of the human genome[1][2]and assembled the first team to transfect a cell with a synthetic chromosome.[3][4] Venter founded Celera Genomics, The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) and the J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), where he currently serves as CEO. He was the co-founder of Human Longevity Inc. and Synthetic Genomics. He was listed on Time magazine's 2007 and 2008 Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world. In 2010, the British magazine New Statesman listed Craig Venter at 14th in the list of "The World's 50 Most Influential Figures 2010".[5] In 2012, Venter was honored with Dan David Prize for his contribution to genome research.[6] He was elected to the American Philosophical Societyin 2013.[7] He is a member of the USA Science and Engineering Festival's Advisory Board.[8]

Early life and education

Venter was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, the son of Elizabeth and John Venter.[9][10]:14 In his youth, he did not take his education seriously, preferring to spend his time on the water in boats or surfing. [10]:1–20 According to his biography, A Life Decoded, he was said to never be a terribly engaged student, having Cs and Ds on his eighth-grade report cards.[10]:1–20 He graduated from Mills High School in Millbrae, California.

Although he opposed the Vietnam War,[11] Venter was drafted and enlisted in the United States Navy where he worked in the intensive-care ward of a field hospital.[12] While in Vietnam, he attempted suicide by swimming out to sea, but changed his mind more than a mile out.[13] Being confronted with severely injured and dying marines on a daily basis instilled in him a desire to study medicine,[14] although he later switched to biomedical research.

Venter began his college education at a community college, College of San Mateo in California, and later transferred to the University of California, San Diego, where he studied under biochemist Nathan O. Kaplan. He received a BS in biochemistry in 1972 and a PhD in physiology and pharmacology in 1975 from UCSD.[15][16]

Career

After working as an associate professor, and later as full professor, at the State University of New York at Buffalo, he joined the National Institutes of Health in 1984.

EST controversy

While an employee of the NIH, Venter learned how to identify mRNA and began to learn more about those expressed in the human brain. The short cDNA sequence fragments he was interested in are called expressed sequence tags, or ESTs. The NIH Office of Technology Transfer and Venter decided to take the ESTs discovered by others in an attempt to patent the genes identified based on studies of mRNA expression in the human brain. When Venter disclosed this strategy during a Congressional hearing, a firestorm of controversy erupted.[17] The NIH later stopped the effort and abandoned the patent applications it had filed, following public outcry.[18]

Human Genome Project

Main article: Human Genome Project

Venter was passionate about the power of genomics to radically transform healthcare. Venter believed that shotgun sequencing was the fastest and most effective way to get useful human genome data.[19] The method was rejected by the Human Genome Project however, since some geneticists felt it would not be accurate enough for a genome as complicated as that of humans, that it would be logistically more difficult, and that it would cost significantly more.[20][21]

Venter viewed the slow pace of progress in the Human Genome project as an opportunity to continue his interest in patenting genes, so he sought funding from the private sector to start Celera Genomics.[22] The company planned to profit from their work by creating genomic data to which users could subscribe for a fee. The goal consequently put pressure on the public genome program and spurred several groups to redouble their efforts to produce the full sequence. Venter's effort won him renown as he and his team at Celera Corporation shared credit for sequencing the first draft human genome with the publicly funded Human Genome Project.[23]

In 2000, Venter and Francis Collins of the National Institutes of Health and U.S. Public Genome Project jointly made the announcement of the mapping of the human genome, a full three years ahead of the expected end of the Public Genome Program. The announcement was made along with U.S. President Bill Clinton, and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair.[24] Venter and Collins thus shared an award for "Biography of the Year" from A&E Network.[25] On 15 February 2001, the Human Genome Project consortium published the first Human Genome in the journal Nature, followed one day later by a Celera publication in Science.[26][27] Despite some claims that shotgun sequencing was in some ways less accurate than the clone-by-clone method chosen by the Human Genome Project,[28] the technique became widely accepted by the scientific community.

Venter was fired by Celera in early 2002.[29] According to his biography, Venter was fired due to a conflict with the main investor, Tony White, specifically barring him from attending the White House ceremony celebrating the achievement of sequencing the human genome.

Global Ocean Sampling Expedition

The Global Ocean Sampling Expedition (GOS) is an ocean exploration genome project with the goal of assessing the genetic diversityin marine microbial communities and to understand their role in nature's fundamental processes. Begun as a Sargasso Sea pilot sampling project in August 2003, Venter announced the full Expedition on 4 March 2004. The project, which used Venter's personal yacht, Sorcerer II, started in Halifax, Canada, circumnavigated the globe and returned to the U.S. in January 2006.[30]

Synthetic Genomics

In June 2005, Venter co-founded Synthetic Genomics, a firm dedicated to using modified microorganisms to produce clean fuels and biochemicals. In July 2009, ExxonMobil announced a $600 million collaboration with Synthetic Genomics to research and develop next-generation biofuels.[31] Venter continues to work on the creation of engineered diatomic microalgae for the production of biofuels.[32][33][34]

Venter is seeking to patent the first partially synthetic species possibly to be named Mycoplasma laboratorium.[35] There is speculation that this line of research could lead to producing bacteria that have been engineered to perform specific reactions, for example, produce fuels, make medicines, combat global warming, and so on.[36]

In May 2010, a team of scientists led by Venter became the first to successfully create what was described as "synthetic life".[37][38] This was done by synthesizing a very long DNA molecule containing an entire bacterium genome, and introducing this into another cell, analogous to the accomplishment of Eckard Wimmer's group, who synthesized and ligated an RNA virus genome and "booted" it in cell lysate.[39] The single-celled organism contains four "watermarks"[40] written into its DNA to identify it as synthetic and to help trace its descendants. The watermarks include 

On March 25, 2016 Venter reported the creation of Syn 3.0, a synthetic genome having the fewest genes of any freely living organism (473 genes). Their aim was to strip away all nonessential genes, leaving only the minimal set necessary to support life. This stripped-down, fast reproducing cell is expected to be a valuable tool for researchers in the field.[42]

In August 2018, Venter retired as chairman of the board, saying he wanted to focus on his work at the J. Craig Venter Institute. He will remain as a scientific advisor to the board.[43]

J. Craig Venter Institute

Venter is currently the chief executive officer of the J. Craig Venter Institute, a nonprofit which conducts research in synthetic biology. Venter founded the organization in 2006. It has facilities in La Jolla and in Rockville, Maryland and employs over 200 people.

Individual human genome

On September 4, 2007, a team led by Sam Levy published one of the first genomes of an individual human—Venter's own DNA sequence.[44] Some of the sequences in Venter's genome are associated with wet earwax,[45] increased risk of antisocial behavior, Alzheimer's and cardiovascular diseases.[10] This publication was especially interesting because it attempted to separate the two haplotypes (the two copies of each chromosome), although it only accomplished this in a limited way.[original research?] The genome as published only had 3 billion bases, rather than the full 6 billion that would comprise a fully diploid sequence. Another 10 years passed before the first haplotype-resolved human genomes began to appear.

The Human Reference Genome Browser is a web application for the navigation and analysis of Venter's recently published genome. The HuRef database consists of approximately 32 million DNA reads sequenced using microfluidic Sanger sequencing, assembled into 4,528 scaffolds and 4.1 million DNA variations identified by genome analysis. These variants include single-nucleotide polymorphisms(SNPs), block substitutions, short and large indels, and structural variations like insertions, deletions, inversions and copy number changes.

The browser enables scientists to navigate the HuRef genome assembly and sequence variations, and to compare it with the NCBI human build 36 assembly in the context of the NCBI and Ensembl annotations. The browser provides a comparative view between NCBI and HuRef consensus sequences, the sequence multi-alignment of the HuRef assembly, Ensembl and dbSNP annotations, HuRef variants, and the underlying variant evidence and functional analysis. The interface also represents the haplotype blocks from which diploid genome sequence can be inferred and the relation of variants to gene annotations. The display of variants and gene annotations are linked to external public resources including dbSNP, Ensembl, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) and Gene Ontology(GO).

Users can search the HuRef genome using HUGO gene names, Ensembl and dbSNP identifiers, HuRef contig or scaffold locations, or NCBI chromosome locations. Users can then easily and quickly browse any genomic region via the simple and intuitive pan and zoom controls; furthermore, data relevant to specific loci can be exported for further analysis.

Human Longevity, Inc.

On March 4, 2014 Venter and co-founders Peter Diamandis and Robert Hariri announced the formation of Human Longevity, Inc., a company focused on extending the healthy, "high performance" human lifespan.[46][47] At the time of the announcement the company had already raised $70 million in venture financing, which was expected to last 18 months.[46][47] Venter served as the chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) until May 2018, when he retired. The company said that it plans to sequence 40,000 genomes per year, with an initial focus on cancer genomes and the genomes of cancer patients.[46]

Human Longevity filed a lawsuit in 2018 against Venter, accusing him of stealing trade secrets. Allegations were made stating that Venter had departed with his company computer that contained valuable information that could be used to start a competing business.[48]The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed by a California Judge on the basis that Human Longevity were unable to present a case that met the legal threshold required for a company, or individual, to sue when its trade secrets have been stolen. [49]

Human Longevity's mission is to extend healthy human lifespan by the use of high-resolution big data diagnostics from genomics, metabolomics, microbiomics, and proteomics, and the use of stem cell therapy.[50]

Published books

Venter is the author of two books, the first of which was an autobiography titled A Life Decoded.[10] Venter's second book was titled Life at the Speed of Light in which he announced his theory that this is the generation in which there appears to be a dovetailing of the two previously diverse fields of science represented by computer programming and the genetic programming of life by DNA sequencing.[51]He was applauded for his position on this by futurist Ray Kurzweil.

Personal life

After a brief marriage to Barbara Rae-Venter,[52][53] with whom he had a son, Christopher, he married [Dr. Claire Marie Fraser (born 1955)][54][16] remaining married to her until 2005.[55] In late 2008 he married Heather Kowalski.[56] They live in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego, CA.[56]Venter is an atheist.[57]

Venter considered that his behavior in his adolescence was indicative of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and later found ADHD-linked genetic variants in his own DNA.[58]

In popular culture

  • Venter has been the subject of articles in several magazines, including Wired,[59] The Economist,[60] Australian science magazine Cosmos,[61][62] and The Atlantic.[63]
  • Venter appears in the two-hour 2001 NOVA special, "Cracking the code of life".[64][65]
  • On May 16, 2004, Venter gave the commencement speech at Boston University.[66]
  • On December 4, 2007, Venter gave the Dimbleby lecture for the BBC in London.[67]
  • Venter delivered the 2008 convocation speech for Faculty of Science honours and specialization students at the University of Alberta.[68]
  • In February 2008, he gave a speech about his current work at the TED conference.[69]
  • Venter was featured in Time magazine's "The Top 10 Everything of 2008" article. Number three in 2008's Top 10 Scientific Discoveries was a piece outlining his work stitching together the 582,000 base pairs necessary to invent the genetic information for a whole new bacterium.[70]
  • On May 20, 2010, Venter announced the creation of first self-replicating semi-synthetic bacterial cell.[71]
  • In the June 2011 issue of Men's Journal, Venter was featured as the "Survival Skills" celebrity of the month. He shared various anecdotes and advice, including stories of his time in Vietnam, as well as mentioning a bout with melanoma on his back, which subsequently resulted in his "giving a pound of flesh" to surgery.[72]
  • In May 2011, Venter was the commencement speaker at the 157th commencement of Syracuse University.[73][74]

Awards and nominations

Works

Venter has authored over 200 publications in scientific journals.[89]

See also

EVIDENCE TIMELINE

1980 (Apri 27)

https://www.newspapers.com/image/873474447/?terms=%22craig%20venter%22&match=1

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1980-04-27-the-buffalo-news-pg-e-7-clip-ub-teams-asthma.jpg

https://www.newspapers.com/image/278015579/?terms=%22craig%20venter%22&match=1

1983 (Aug 15)

https://www.newspapers.com/image/874868227/?terms=%22craig%20venter%22&match=1

1987 (March) - with Claire Fraser..

https://www.newspapers.com/image/258114945/?terms=%22craig%20venter%22&match=1

1987 (Dec 1) 

RESEARCH ARTICLE

FREE ACCESS

SHARE ON

Primary structure of rat cardiac beta-adrenergic and muscarinic cholinergic receptors obtained by automated DNA sequence analysis: further evidence for a multigene family.

J Gocayne, D A Robinson, M G FitzGerald, F Z Chung, A R Kerlavage, K U Lentes, J Lai, C D Wang, C M Fraser, and J C Venter-6Authors Info & Affiliations

December 1, 1987

84 (23) 8296-8300

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.84.23.8296


1991 (Nov ) - in toruble for patenting genes ...  

https://www.newspapers.com/image/176288288/?terms=%22craig%20venter%22&match=1

Human genome project ...


1993 - Claire Fraser working with Kinkaid

A Strong  Promoter  Element Is Located between Alternative Exons of a Gene  Encoding  the Human y-Aminobutyric  Acid-Type A Receptor ,83 Subunit  (GABRBS)” (Received for publication, July 17,  1992) Ewen F. KirknessS and Claire M. Fraser From the Section on Molecular  Neurobiolopv. Laboraton of N 

1995 (Aug 11) submitted - 

10.1126/science.270.5235.397

Photo date unknown ... https://www.sciencephoto.com/media/229018/view ...

est 1996 ? 

1998 (Aug 06) - The Baltimore Sun: "Venter, Perkin-Elmer name venture Celera"

Also mentioned : Perkin-Elmer Corporation  ,  Celera Genomics Corporation  ,   Dr. John Craig Venter (born 1946)  

Full newspaper page : [HN0234][GDrive]  /  Clip above : [HN0235][GDrive]

2002 (April 30) - NYTimes : "Thrown Aside, Genome Pioneer Plots a Rebound"

By Nicholas Wade  /  Saved as PDF : [HN02AX][GDrive

Mentioned :  [Celera Genomics Corporation] / Applied Biosystems   /  Wallace Herbert Steinberg (born 1934)  /    

What do you do for an encore after you have decoded the human genome? [Dr. John Craig Venter (born 1946)] has had to ponder that problem sooner than he expected after being forced out as president of [Celera Genomics Corporation] in January.

He has now made his decision, to start two institutes and to write a book. One institute, he said in an interview last week before giving a lecture at the Yale School of Medicine, will study issues of science policy like the genetic basis of race and stem cell research. The other will try to engineer microbes genetically to convert carbon dioxide into hydrogen, producing clean energy and averting greenhouse warming in the same step.

As for the book, that will be based on his own genome, which he has now declared to be the principal human genome decoded by [Celera Genomics Corporation]. ''I will do a detailed examination of my genetic code and use that as a basis of writing my book on genomics,'' he said.

The new turn in Dr. Venter's career does not seem likely to be significantly more placid than the previous phases. In conversation, he still alternates between assertions of his achievements and aspersions on his academic critics, some of whom attacked him again in an article in March in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. He is proud of what he achieved at Celera, but perhaps still a little bruised by the buffeting that he received there from the demands to generate revenue, as well as scientific results.

''There was severe pressure on me from the people who put up the money, as well as from the Collinses and Landers,'' he said, referring generically to his academic rivals in the race to decode the human genome, Dr. Francis S. Collins of the National Institutes of Health and Dr. Eric S. Lander of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ''So I was walking a tightrope, though at times it felt like sliding along a razor blade.''

Although best known for his role in decoding the human genome, Dr. Venter had made three prior landmark scientific discoveries. All were achieved because of his skill in spotting the gains that could be reaped from the new DNA sequencing machines made by [Applied Biosystems] of Foster City, Calif.

As a little-known researcher at the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Venter used the first generation of the machines to discover hundreds of human genes by decoding just short parts of them. A biomedical entrepreneur, [Wallace Herbert Steinberg (born 1934)], who died in 1995, set up Dr. Venter in a nonprofit institute, the Institute for Genomic Research, or TIGR, to pursue the advance in harness with a commercial partner, Human Genome Sciences, headed by Dr. William A. Haseltine.

At TIGR, Dr. Venter assembled a loyal and talented group of scientists that included Dr. Hamilton O. Smith, a Nobel biologist. The team's second coup was to decode the full genome of a bacterium, handily beating the government-supported effort in 1995.

At the Yale lecture last week, Dr. Venter retold the story of how he applied for a National Institutes of Health grant to decode the bacterium by a novel method but was rejected by a panel of academic genome scientists who declared his decoding method unworkable. Dr. Venter had to finish the project with his own funds, he told the audience, but not before Dr. Collins had turned down an appeal, repeating the grant committee's finding that Dr. Venter's method could not work. Dr. Collins, through a spokesman, declined to comment.

''While the N.I.H. is not very good at funding new ideas, once an idea is established they are extremely good,'' Dr. Venter added, noting the profusion of the institutes' money now devoted to decoding other bacterial genomes.

Dr. Venter was then invited to sequence the human genome by Dr. Michael W. Hunkapiller, head of Applied Biosystems.

Given the chance to trounce his rivals on their principal project, Dr. Venter accepted and set up his company, Celera Genomics, that started sequencing the human genome from scratch. He tested his novel decoding first on the fruit fly genome, his third major scientific achievement, and then turned to the human genome, which both he and the government consortium completed in draft form in June 2000.

Celera's plan was to sell its genome data to subscribers. Dr. Venter said that this became a profitable business of more than $100 million a year, a figure that ''not many biotech companies have achieved.'' The problem was that the government was giving away much the same data for free. Dr. Venter declined to address directly the question of whether he thought it a proper role of the government, which usually supports just precommercial research, to compete with his database.

Given Celera's high stock price, investors wanted more than just the income from the database. ''The experiment worked, but not on the level wanted by people who wanted to become billionaires out of it,'' Dr. Venter said.

His original plan, Dr. Venter said, was to stay at Celera for four years. He made it through a ''very strenuous'' three and a half. ''I had the demands of the pressure of the human genome race,'' he said. ''I was trying as an absolute novice to run a New York Stock Exchange company and dealing with some of the issues and personalities associated with that.''

But on leaving Celera, it was not so easy for him to return to his home at TIGR. In his absence, his wife, [Dr. Claire Marie Fraser (born 1955)], had taken over the institute and built its staff to 300 people, with $40 million a year in research grants, including financing to sequence the anthrax DNA. ''So I said it was much better, rather than disrupt that structure, to form these sister organizations where I could play a role,'' Dr. Venter said.

He is starting his institutes, the TIGR Center for the Advancement of Genomics and the Institute for Biological Energy, with the money that he made from his stock in Human Genome Sciences and Celera. The policy institute may weigh in on political issues like stem cell research and what Dr. Venter calls ''the confusion over genetic determinism.''

His energy institute is centered on a group of ancient microbes, archea, which inhabit the deepest parts of the earth and ocean. The archea do not infect humans, making them safer to manipulate. Dr. Venter said he hoped that they could be genetically engineered to suck out carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, relieving the threat of greenhouse warming, and to convert the gas into hydrogen, a source of nonpolluting energy.

At 56, Dr. Venter is still full of vigor and ambition. He seems to thrive on opposition, missing no chance to skewer his academic critics. Yet he enjoys the academic approval of the prizes and honors that are showering down on him.

''I've always felt part of the academic community,'' he said. ''I had to form Celera to get the money for sequencing the human genome.''

He professes complete lack of concern that he has not been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, an elite group that has honored his chief academic rivals.

He responds heatedly to the criticism that he is brilliant at spurring public interest in his projects but seldom finishes them. ''Do I come up with new ideas and move on to other things?'' he asked. ''Yes. I could easily spend my entire life working on any one of these things, but science is a lot further ahead because I didn't.''

Later he referred to his role in life as ''like a superenzyme.'' ''I'm catalyzing things,'' Dr. Venter added.

The policy and biological energy institutes represent new areas where, he concedes, he is a neophyte. At TIGR, where he is still chairman of the board, he intends to decode more genomes, particularly those that throw light on one of his deepest interests, evolutionary biology.

He said he thought that he could get ''most of the chimp genome'' with a shortcut based on comparing it with the human genome. ''But the real things are the blue whale, the dolphin and the elephant,'' he says. ''There are no bad genomes to do.''

No bad genomes -- an appropriate motto for the man who was first to decode the 1.8 million DNA units of the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae, the 120 million units of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster and the 3 billion units of that distinctive variety of person, Homo sapiens var. Venter.