http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1965/jacob-bio.html
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This
autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first
published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and
republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the
source as shown above.
François Jacob
was born in June 1920 in Nancy (France). He was the only son of Simon
Jacob and Thérèse Franck. After attending the
Lycée Carnot in Paris, he began studying medicine at the Faculty
of Paris, with the intention of becoming a surgeon. These studies were
interrupted by the war. In June 1940, when in his second year of
medicine, he left France and joined the Free French Forces in London.
He was sent to Africa as a medical officer and saw action in Fezzan,
Libya, Tripolitania and Tunisia, where he was wounded. He was posted to
the Second Armoured Division, and was severely wounded in Normandy, in
August 1944. He remained in the hospital for seven months, and was
awarded the Croix de la Libération, the highest French military
decoration of this war.
After the war, François Jacob
completed his medical studies and submitted his doctoral thesis in
Paris in 1947. He was unable to practise surgery on account of his
injuries, and worked in various fields before turning to biology. He
obtained a science degree in 1951, and then a doctorate in science in
1954 at the Sorbonne, with a thesis on «Lysogenic bacteria and
the provirus concept».
In 1950, François Jacob joined
the Institut Pasteur under Dr. André Lwoff. He was appointed
Laboratory Director in 1956, then in 1960 Head of the Department of
Cell Genetics, recently created at the Institut Pasteur. In 1964 he was
appointed Professor at the Collège de France, where a chair of
Cell Genetics was created for him.1
The work of François
Jacob has dealt mainly with the genetic mechanisms existing in bacteria
and bacteriophages, and with the biochemical effects of mutations. He
first studied the properties of lysogenic bacteria and demonstrated
their «immunity», i.e. the existence of a mechanism
inhibiting the activity of genes in the prophage as in infective
particles of the same type. In 1954 he began a long and fruitful
collaboration with Elie Wollman, in an attempt to establish the nature
of the relationships between the prophage and genetic material of the
bacterium. This study led to a definition of the mechanism of bacterial
conjugation, and also enabled an analysis of the genetic apparatus of
the bacterial cell. From this work there emerged a whole series of new
concepts, such as the oriented process of genetic transfer from the
male to the female, the circularity of the bacterial chromosome or the
episome concept. The whole of this work was summarized in a book
Sexuality and the Genetics of Bacteria.
In 1958 the remarkable
analogy revealed by genetic analysis of lysogeny and that of the
induced biosynthesis of ß-galactosidase led François
Jacob, with Jacques Monod, to study the mechanisms responsible for the
transfer of genetic information as well as the regulatory pathways
which, in the bacterial cell, adjust the activity and synthesis of
macromolecules. Following this analysis, Jacob and Monod proposed a
series of new concepts, those of messenger RNA, regulator genes,
operons and allosteric proteins.
In 1963, together with Sydney
Brenner, François Jacob put forward the «replicon»
hypothesis to account for certain aspects of cell division in bacteria.
Since then, he has devoted his attention to the genetic analysis of the
mechanisms of cell division. In 1970 he began to study cultured
mammalian cells, particularly certain aspects of their genetic
properties.2
In 1970, François Jacob published a book La
logique du vivant, une Histoire de l'Hérédité, in
which, beginning with the 16th century, he traces the stages in the
study of living beings that have led up to molecular biology.3
François
Jacob has been awarded a number of French scientific prizes, notably
the Charles Léopold Mayer prize by the Académie des
Sciences (1962). He is a foreign member of the Danish Royal Academy of
Arts and Sciences (1962), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
(1964), the National Academy of Sciences of the United States (1969),
and the American Philosophical Society (1969). He has received honorary
degrees from several universities. He was invited to give a Harvey
Lecture (New York, 1958) and the Dunham Lectures (Harvard, 1964).4
In
1947 François Jacob married the pianist Lise Bloch. They have
four children: Pierre (born in 1949), who has become a philosopher,
Laurent and Odile (born in 1952) and Henri (born in 1954), who are
still undifferentiated.5
The biography was updated by the Laureate in April 2005:
1. He has been Chairman of the Board of the Institut Pasteur from 1982 to 1988.
2.
In the last decade, François Jacob has shifted to the study of
the early stage of development in the mouse embryo using mouse
teratocarcinoma as a tool. His main goal is to analyze the regulatory
circuits involved in development and cellular differenciation of the
early embryo.
3. In 1981, he published Le Jeu des Possibles,
a view on evolution and its mechanisms. In 1987, he published an
autobiography La Statue Intérieure, and in 1997 he published La
Souris, la Mouche et l'Homme.
4. François Jacob is a
member of the Académie des Sciences, Paris (1977) and of the
Académie Française, Paris (1996). He is a foreign member
of the Royal Society, London (1973), the Académie Royale de
Médecine de Belgique (1973), the Academy of Sciences of Hungary
(1986), the Royal Academy of Sciences, Madrid (1987).
5. Lise Bloch died. Second marriage in 1999 with Geneviève Barrier.
For more biographical information, see:
Jacob, François, The Statue Within: An Autobiography. Basic Books, New York, 1988.