Guido Pontecorvo
Italian geneticist

Guido Pontecorvo

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Italian geneticist
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
29 November 1907(Pisa, Province of Pisa, Tuscany, Italy)
Death:
25 September 1999(Pisa, Province of Pisa, Tuscany, Italy)
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Biography

Introduction

Guido Pellegrino Arrigo Pontecorvo FRS (29 November 1907, Pisa, Italy – 25 September 1999) was an Italian-born Scottish geneticist.

Career

Guido Pontecorvo, was born into a family of wealthy Italian Industrialists. He fled to Britain after being dismissed from his post in Florence in 1938, due to his Jewish heritage.

  • Institute of Animal Genetics, University of Edinburgh. 1938–40 and 1944–45
  • Department of Zoology, University of Glasgow, 1941–44
  • Dept of Genetics, University of Glasgow, 1945-68 (Professor 1956-68)
  • Honorary Director, MRC Unit of Cell Genetics, 1966–68
  • Member of research staff, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, 1968–75
  • Honorary Consultant Geneticist, ICRF, 1975–80

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1955.

He was one of eight children. He was a brother to Gillo Pontecorvo and Bruno Pontecorvo.

Legacy

The current genetics building at the University of Glasgow is named in honour of Guido Pontecorvo. The Pontecorvo Building is part of the Anderson College complex located on Dumbarton Road in the West End of Glasgow. It houses one of the few working Paternoster elevators in the UK.

He has also lent his name to the annual Pontecorvo award, presented to the most promising genetics student in the department.

Past Winners:

2003 - Robert Irving

2004 - John Rowell

2007 - Katie Armstrong

2009 - Stuart Meiklejohn

2010 - Angela Wilson

2011

2012 Alun Passey