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Tuesday, April 20, 2004
WRITER: Phil Williams, 706-542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
CONTACT: Jeffrey Bennetzen, 706-542-3698, maize@uga.edu
UGA PROFESSOR JEFFREY BENNETZEN NAMED TO NATIONAL ACADEMY
OF SCIENCES—ONE OF TOP HONORS FOR SCIENTISTS IN UNITED STATES
ATHENS, Ga. – Jeffrey L. Bennetzen, the Norman and Doris GilesGeorgia
Research Alliance professor of molecular genetics at the University
of Georgia, has been elected to membership in the prestigious National
Academy of Sciences. Results of the election were made public this
morning at the annual meeting of the National Academy in Washington,
D.C.
Election to the National Academy represents the summit of career
achievements for scientists and engineers in the United States, and
only a small fraction of working scientists are elected to the group.
Although anyone can suggest a name for membership, formal proposals
for nomination must come from members of the Academy. New members
and foreign associates are elected annually at the Academy’s
meeting in April.
Bennetzen is the first UGA faculty member named to the NAS since
Susan Wessler was elected in 1998. Bennetzen joins a small group of
scientists at UGA who are members of the NAS. The members at UGA are
Wyatt Anderson, John Avise and Norman Giles (now retired), genetics;
Norman Allinger, chemistry; Brent Berlin, anthropology; and Glenn
Burton, agronomy. The late Eugene Odum of ecology and Lois Miller
of the departments of entomology and genetics were also members.
“Jeff Bennetzen’s election not only is a testament to
the quality of the University of Georgia faculty but demonstrates
once again the vitality of the Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar
program,” said President Michael F. Adams. “I congratulate
Jeff who has been at the university less than a year and appreciate
the efforts of the GRA, which was of great assistance in his recruitment.”
“It’s a great pleasure to be elected to the Academy by
my fellow scientists,” said Bennetzen. “The students and
other colleagues in my laboratory over the years deserve to share
in this honor, as their inspiration and hard work were largely responsible
for what we have accomplished.”
Bennetzen is a pioneer in the comparative analysis of plant genomes,
especially the contribution of transposable elements as generators
of diversity. Among his most notable discoveries was the identification
of mechanisms of genome growth in grasses.
“I am delighted that Dr. Bennetzen has been elected to the
National Academy,” said Wyatt Anderson, dean of the Franklin
College of Arts and Sciences. “It is an honor to have him as
a faculty member at the University of Georgia.”
Bennetzen, 51, was a professor at Purdue University in West Lafayette,
Ind., for two decades. He received his bachelor’s degree in
biology from the University of California at San Diego in 1974 and
his doctoral degree in biochemistry from the University of Washington
in 1980.
After earning his Ph.D., he served as a postdoctoral fellow at Washington
University, Stanford University and the University of California at
Berkeley. From 1981 to 1983 he was a research scientist at the International
Plant Research Institute in San Carlos, Calif., before joining the
department of biological sciences at Purdue.
The author of dozens of publications in peer-reviewed journals, Bennetzen
has won numerous awards, including a Presidential Young Investigator
Award, a Fulbright Award and the Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Centenary
Professorship at the University of Hyderabad in 2002.
He is co-editor of The Plant Cell and has served on the editorial
boards of more than a dozen journals during his academic career. Bennetzen
is a highly sought-after lecturer and teacher, and he delivers about
15 presentations a year at venues around the world.
Among his numerous research interests are: plant genome structure
and evolution; the relationship between genome structure and evolution
and gene function; the co-evolution of plantmicrobe and plantparasite
interactions; and the breeding and genetic engineering of plants with
improved resistances to stresses.
The National Academy of Sciences was created on March 3, 1863, and
established service to the nation as its dominant purpose. The act
also named 50 charter members. Subsequent executive orders have affirmed
the importance of the National Research Council and further broadened
its charter. The National Academy of Sciences established the National
Academy of Engineering in 1964 and the Institute of Medicine in 1970.
Much like the National Academy of Sciences, each of these organizations
consists of members elected by peers in recognition of distinguished
achievement in their respective fields. The National Academy of Sciences
includes about 1,800 members, the National Academy of Engineering
about 1,900 and the Institute of Medicine about 1,200. All three organizations
also elect foreign associates.
News Bureau
University of Georgia News Service
A201 Stegeman Coliseum
Athens, GA 30602-4371
706/542-8083 (voice) 706/542-3939 (fax)
www.uga.edu/news * uganews@uga.edu
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