Science and Democracy, a lecture series aimed at exploring both the promised 
benefits or our era's most salient scientific and technological breakthroughs 
and the potentially harmful consequences of developments that are inadequately 
understood, debated, or managed by politicians, lay publics, and policy 
institutions.

Phillip A. Sharp
Institute Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

“New Biology and Convergence of Life Sciences and Engineering”

With Panelists:
Walter Gilbert, Harvard Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Everett Mendelsohn, Harvard Department of the History of Science
Fiona Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management

Moderated by
Sheila Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies, 
Harvard Kennedy School

Tuesday, December 11
5:00 - 7:00 pm

Science Center A
One Oxford St.
Cambridge, MA

Revolutionary advances over the past half century produced the sequence of the 
human genome and remarkable advances in the understanding of disease. Perhaps 
more important, the technology of DNA sequencing has revealed the information 
of all life forms. This advance can be considered the second revolution in life 
sciences, the first being the discovery of the structure of DNA. The third 
revolution will come from the convergence of life sciences with engineering, 
and computation and physical sciences. Convergence will help mankind meet some 
of the major challenges of the coming century, i.e. food for nine billion 
people, better protection of the environment, sustainable energy sources and 
better quality of healthcare.

A world leader of research in molecular biology and biochemistry, Dr. Phillip 
A. Sharp is Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 
Much of Dr. Sharp's scientific work has been conducted at MIT's Center for 
Cancer Research (now the Koch Institute), which he joined in 1974 and directed 
from 1985 to 1991. He subsequently led the Department of Biology from 1991 to 
1999 before assuming the directorship of the McGovern Institute from 2000-2004. 
 His research interests have centered on the molecular biology of gene 
expression relevant to cancer and the mechanisms of RNA splicing.  His landmark 
achievement was the discovery of RNA splicing in 1977.  This work provided one 
of the first indications of the startling phenomenon of “discontinuous genes” 
in mammalian cells.  The discovery that genes contain nonsense segments that 
are edited out by cells in the course of utilizing genetic information is 
important in understanding the genetic causes of cancer and other diseases. 
This discovery, which fundamentally changed scientists' understanding of the 
structure of genes, earned Dr. Sharp the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or 
Medicine.  His lab has now turned its attention to understanding how RNA 
molecules act as switches to turn genes on and off (RNA interference). These 
newly discovered processes have revolutionized cell biology and could 
potentially generate a new class of therapeutics.

A native of Kentucky, Dr. Sharp earned a B.A. degree from Union College, KY in 
1966, and a PhD in chemistry from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana 
in 1969.  He did his postdoctoral training at the California Institute of 
Technology, where he studied the molecular biology of plasmids from bacteria in 
Professor Norman Davidson's laboratory. Prior to joining MIT, he was Senior 
Scientist at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. In 1978 Dr. Sharp co-founded Biogen 
(now Biogen Idec) and in 2002 he co-founded Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, an 
early-stage therapeutics company.

This event is organized by the Program on Science, Technology, and Society, at 
the Harvard Kennedy School and co-sponsored by the School of Engineering and 
Applied Sciences, the Graduate School of Design, and the Harvard University 
Center for the Environment.  For more information on Science, Technology, and 
Society events at Harvard University, please visit: 
www.ksg.harvard.edu/sts/<http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/sts/>. This lecture and 
discussion is free and open to the public.

Contact:
Lisa Matthews
Events Coordinator
Harvard University Center for the Environment

24 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
p. 617-495-8883
f. 617-496-0425

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