Christiane loved to study what she
was interested in. Her teachers called her a brilliant student but very lazy.
Christiane found that she had to work hard in a man’s world, especially since
women were meant to stay at home. She decided from the beginning that her
studies had to come first. She eventually earned a PhD in molecular biology in
1974. Christiane wanted to study something new and different. She was instantly
attracted to the area of development in Drosophila
(fruit flies). She always found fruit flies fascinating, and she wanted to
know how a single cell could turn into a complicated organism.
Christiane and her team began
working on fruit fly embryos. Fruit flies were chosen due to their fast
reproduction rate. She would expose the embryo to a mutagen and see how this
would affect the fly’s development. Through multiple experiments, she figured
out which genes controlled which body part. She even studied a fly that had no
head. Instead, it had two tails. Christiane and her team identified about 5,000
genes that were vital to a fruit fly’s development. Her work eventually led to
a better understanding on how human develop and how birth defects can affect
development. Christiane, along with Eric Wieschaus and Edward B. Lewis, was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1995. Christiane
currently works on zebrafish to study mutations and vertebrate development.
Christiane was a woman who knew what
she wanted and knew what she loved. She loved fruit flies so much she admitted
to dreaming about them. That amount of love for research and fruit flies
is incredibly admirable. One of the greatest traits scientists have is their
passion for their interests. To think that some people believe that women
shouldn’t have a passion for science is unbelievable. Yet, women continue to
prove that they can change the world. Hopefully the women I talked about
inspired some of you to learn more about women in science. We’re a pretty cool
bunch, if I so say so myself.
Sources
“Women
in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World,” written and
illustrated by Rachel Ignotofsky.
Dr. Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard: http://www.famousscientists.org/christiane-nusslein-volhard/