James Watson
James Dewey Watson was an American molecular biologist, geneticist and zoologist. In 1953, he co-authored with Francis Crick the academic paper in Nature proposing the double helix structure of... Wikipedia
- Born: James Dewey Watson, April 06, 1928, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
- Age at death: 97 years
- Died: November 06, 2025, East Northport, New York, U.S.
- Fields: Genetics
- Institutions: Indiana University, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Harvard University, California Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, National Institutes of Health
- Education: University of Chicago (BS), Indiana University Bloomington (PhD)
- Thesis: The Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated Bacteriophage– (1951)
- Doctoral students: Mario Capecchi, Bob Horvitz, Peter B. Moore, David Schlessinger, Joan Steitz
- Other notable students: Ewan Birney, Ronald W. Davis (postdoc), Phillip Allen Sharp (postdoc), Richard J. Roberts (postdoc), John Tooze (postdoc), Chen Lan-bo (postdoc)
- Known for: DNA structure, Molecular biology
- Notable awards: Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research (1960), Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1962), John J. Carty Award (1971), Copley Medal (1993), Lomonosov Gold Medal (1994)
- Children: 2
- Data source: DuckDuckGo