
by The Associated Press
Published: Fri, October 10, 2008 - 4:58 pm CST
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) - Douglas Prasher is not bitter that hisname is not on this year's Nobel Prize in chemistry even though his
research helped point the winning scientists in the right
direction.
And he's not bitter that instead of doing research in a lab,
he's now driving the courtesy van at Bill Penney Toyota in
Huntsville.
The 57-year-old Prasher says it doesn't bother him.
Prasher was working as a young scientist at the University of
Georgia and later at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in
Massachusetts when he isolated and copied the gene that makes the
mysterious Aequoria Victoria jellyfish glow.
It was a glow he believed could possibly be used to highlight
molecular functions that otherwise would be invisible to
scientists.
Prasher's research grant ran out and he said he gave a copy of
the gene to scientist Martin Chalfie of Columbia University and to
Roger Tsien, a researcher at the University of California, San
Diego.
Chalfie, Tsien and another scientist, Osamu Shimomura won the
Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday for helping turn the substance
that lights up the jellyfish into a vital biotechnology tool.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Experts Gather For Bug Conference










Recently Commented On
17 Arrested In Craig’s…
Fire Chief Memorial
Mom in Court
Toddler Shot In Apparent Drive-by…
Local Impacts from Hurricane…