Professor Colin Blakemore
The article Tighter laws needed on sale of DNA samples, says research chief began
One of the country’s leading scientists yesterday called on the government to draw up new laws to regulate companies that sell DNA samples which could be used to manufacture a biological weapon.
Colin Blakemore, chief executive of the Medical Research Council, said foolproof protection was needed to prevent potentially dangerous material getting into the wrong hands. His comments were endorsed by other senior scientists and follow a Guardian investigation that revealed the ease with which a potential terrorist could buy such materials on the internet. The Guardian was able to order a small fragment of DNA from the variola virus, the virus that causes smallpox.
“It is obviously a worry that fragments of a potentially very dangerous pathogen can be obtained as easily as your investigation suggests”, said Professor Blakemore. “This is one area where legislation or new regulation might be appropriate.”
Professor Colin Blakemore, Ph.D., FMedSci, FRS
is Chief Executive of the
Medical Research Council (MRC).
His research focuses on vision, the early development of the brain
and, more recently, conditions like
Huntington’s and
Alzheimer’s disease.
He has published over 220 scientific papers and a number of books on
these subjects.
Colin won a state scholarship to
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge where
he gained a first-class degree in medical sciences, then completed his
doctoral studies at the
University of California, Berkeley, USA as a
Harkness fellow. He returned to Cambridge to undertake post-doctoral
research, before moving to the
University of Oxford where he became
Waynflete Professor of Physiology at the age of 35.
He was director of the
MRC Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience for eight
years and, in 1989, was awarded the
Royal Society’s
Michael Faraday Prize
for excellence in communicating science to UK audiences. He has also
served as president of the
Biosciences Federation,
British Neuroscience Association, the
Physiological Society, and
president and chairman of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science. In 2003, he
succeeded
Professor Sir George Radda as the head of the
Medical Research Council, a
national organization that supports medical science with an annual budget
of almost £500 million.
Colin authored
Where would we be without boffins?,
Mechanics of the Mind (BBC Reith Lectures; 1976),
Mindwaves: Thoughts on Intelligence, Identity, and
Consciousness,
The Mind Machine (BBC Classics), and is
coeditor of
The Oxford Companion to the Body,
Vision : Coding and Efficiency,
The Physiology of Cognitive Processes, and
Gender and Society : Essays Based on Herbert Spencer Lectures Given in
the University of Oxford.
Read
his interview by
Advances in Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation (ACNR) and
the transcript of his
Science Show interview. Watch Colin chair discussions on
GM Foods – Safe?,
Nanotechnology,
Forever Young,
The Realities of Risk,
Defying Death,
The Theory of Everything,
Endless Energy,
Is There Anybody Out There?,
Voyage to the Bottom of the Deep Deep Sea,
Predicting Personality,
Eyes in the Skies,
The End of Evolution?,
Antimatter,
Cloning, and
Machines with Minds.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.