George Church

George Church Harvard and MIT

George is a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School, founder of 15 companies in synthetic biology, and architect of several of science’s most path-breaking inquiries into the genome and human brain.

George Church is Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). 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.

George is widely recognized for his innovative contributions to genomic science and his many pioneering contributions to chemistry and biomedicine. In 1984, he developed the first direct genomic sequencing method, which resulted in the first commercial genome sequence (the human pathogen, H. pylori). He helped initiate the Human Genome Project in 1984 and the Personal Genome Project in 2005. George invented the broadly applied concepts of molecular multiplexing and tags, homologous recombination methods, and array DNA synthesizers.

Engineering Biology Awards

  • 04 October 2017
  • 8:35 am - 8:45 am
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Fireside Chat: Big Data and AI Meet Synthetic Biology

  • 04 October 2017
  • 11:25 am - 12:10 pm
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