Genes are physical objects located on chromosomes, not theoretical constructs

Fly room at Columbia University
Photo credit
On one random day after thousands of Drosophila crosses, Thomas Morgan came across a fly that had white eyes instead of red. Fascinated, he began crossing the flies, trying to figure out how this mutation arose and if it would be passed on. His discoveries were printed in Science and built a foundation for the modern theory of genes. Interestingly, only one year earlier, Morgan had criticized scientists for believing that genes were located on chromosomes without any hard evidence. Being an adamant believer in hypothesis-driven science, he could now show that genes were located on chromosomes and that some of these genes were sex-linked. Additionally, this data debunked the widely-held notion that mutations immediately gave rise to new species. This paper gave the first hard evidence that genes are located on chromosomes, leading Morgan and his students to eventually make the first genetic map.
And a paper by Morgan's student, Calvin Bridges, proving the theory of chromosome inheritance.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.