George Church

George Church

Professor of Genetics, Harvard Medical School

George Church is a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School and a professor of health sciences and technology at Harvard and MIT. In 1984, Church, along with Walter Gilbert, developed the first direct genomic sequencing method and helped initiate the Human Genome Project. Church is responsible for inventing the concepts of molecular multiplexing and tags, homologous recombination methods, and DNA array synthesizers. Church initiated the Personal Genome Project in 2005 as well as research into synthetic biology. He is director of the U.S. Department of Energy Center on Bioenergy at Harvard and MIT and director of the National Institutes of Health Center of Excellence in Genomic Science at Harvard, MIT and Washington University. He is a senior editor for Nature EMBO Molecular Systems Biology.

4 min
Much of what is natural is painful, and a lot of what is synthetic is not well thought out.
2 min
Church tries to avoid wasting any more of the world’s 6 billion minds.
3 min
“Even a blind person knows the shape of the parts of a car,” George Church says. “We didn’t know the shape of anything that we are made out of.”
4 min
It all started with dragonfly larvae in his backyard.