Sir Richard J. Roberts
Richard
J. Roberts, Ph.D. is Chief Scientific Officer,
Restriction Enzymes, New England Biolabs.
Rich was awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in Medicine with
Phillip Allen Sharp for the discovery of introns in eukaryotic DNA and
the mechanism of gene-splicing. In 1994, he was awarded an Honorary
Degree (Doctor of Science) by the University of Bath.
He was knighted in 2008.
His laboratory has a long history of research on restriction enzymes and
their associated DNA methyltransferases. He is interested in developing
methods to find new enzymes with novel properties and he uses a
combination of bioinformatics and biochemical experimentation to probe
DNA sequence information from the many microbial genome sequences that
are now available.
In addition, Rich is interested in the
use of
bioinformatics to explore the microbial genomes and use the restriction
systems as a paradigm for other general types of genes that are present.
One example concerns the DNA methyltransferase genes, which are a
specific case of a more general class of mosaic genes that contain a
mixture of well-conserved segments and more variable regions. The
restriction enzyme genes exemplify the species and/or strain specific
genes that typically have no homologs in GenBank. He looks for general
ways to predict function in such cases.
The overall theme
of his work is
to use bioinformatics to make predictions that can then be tested
experimentally in my laboratory. This can then lead to better
bioinformatics predictions. He also runs REBASE, a
database of information about restriction enzymes and their associated
methyltransferases.
His papers include
The Sequence of the Human Genome,
An amazing sequence arrangement at the 5’ ends of adenovirus 2 messenger
RNA,
Predictive motifs derived from cytosine methyltransferases,
Homing endonucleases: keeping the house in order,
The DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferases,
A nomenclature for restriction enzymes, DNA
methyltransferases, homing endonucleases and their
genes,
AdoMet-dependent methylation, DNA methyltransferases and base
flipping, and
Restriction and modification enzymes and their recognition
sequences.
Rich earned his B.Sc. in Chemistry at
University of Sheffield, Sheffield, England in 1965.
He earned his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry in 1968, also at the University
of Sheffield.
Read
Protect our Access to Medical Research.
Read his Nobel Lecture
An Amazing Distortion in DNA Induced by a Methlytransferase.
Read his
Wikipedia profile and his
Nobel Prize profile.