MONOD, JACQUES


Meaning of MONOD, JACQUES in English

born Feb. 9, 1910, Paris, France died May 31, 1976, Cannes Jacques Monod in his laboratory, 1965. in full Jacques Lucien Monod French biochemist who, with Franois Jacob, did much to elucidate how genes regulate cell metabolism by directing the biosynthesis of enzymes. The pair shared, along with Andr Lwoff, the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1965. In 1961 Jacob and Monod proposed the existence of a messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA), a substance whose base sequence is complementary to that of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in the cell. They postulated that the messenger carries the information encoded in the base sequence to ribosomes, the sites of protein synthesis; here the base sequence of the messenger RNA is translated into the amino acid sequence of a proteinaceous enzyme (biological catalyst). In advancing the concept of gene complexes that they called operons, Jacob and Monod postulated the existence of a class of genes that regulate the function of other genes by affecting the synthesis of messenger RNA. For this work, which has been proved generally correct for bacteria, the two men were awarded a Nobel Prize. Monod's book-length essay Le Hasard et la ncessit (1970; Chance and Necessity) argued that the origin of life and the process of evolution are the result of chance.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.