Élie Wollman
Élie Léo Wollman was a French microbial geneticist who first described plasmids, and served as vice director of research for the Pasteur Institute for twenty years. He was awarded the 1976 Grand Prix Charles-Leopold Mayer by the French Academy of Sciences and Chevalier of the French Legion of Honour. He is the son of microbiologists at the Pasteur Institute, Eugène and Elisabeth Wollman, and the father of Francis-André Wollman, another prominent scientist.
Research
- In his lab at the Pasteur Institute in Paris Wollman played a key role in the elucidation of the organization of genetic material.
- Developed the experimental method of interrupted mating, which underpinned the gene mapping of bacterial chromosomes. This work laid the foundation for Francois Jacob's Nobel Prize-winning work.
- With Francois Jacob, he published a monograph, Sexuality and the genetics of bacteria, in 1959.