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ROGER N. BEACHY, PH.D.
PRESIDENT
DONALD DANFORTH PLANT SCIENCE CENTER
Dr. Roger Beachy is the
founding president of the not-for-profit Donald
Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis,
Missouri, a position he has held since January
1999. In this role, Dr. Beachy has been
responsible for developing and implementing the
Danforth Center's strategic direction,
recruiting its staff, and formulating its
research programs. Dr. Roger N. Beachy, a member
of the National Academy of Sciences, is
internationally known for his groundbreaking
research on developing virus-resistant plants
through biotechnology.
From 1991 to 1998, Dr. Beachy headed the
Division of Plant Biology at The Scripps
Research Institute, a leading biomedical
research center in La Jolla, California. He was
also Professor and Scripps Family Chair in Cell
Biology and co-director of the International
Laboratory for Tropical Agricultural
Biotechnology (ILTAB) at Scripps.
Dr. Beachy was a member of the Biology
Department at Washington University in St. Louis
from 1978 to 1991, where he was Professor and
Director of the Center for Plant Science and
Biotechnology. His work at Washington
University, in collaboration with Monsanto
Company, led to the development of the world's
first genetically modified food crop, a variety
of tomato that was modified for resistance to
virus disease. His technique to produce virus
resistance in tomatoes has been replicated by
researchers around the world to produce many
types of plants with resistance to a number of
different virus diseases.
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Research under Dr. Beachy's
direction has led to a number of patent
applications. He has edited or contributed to 50
book articles, and his work has produced more
than 220 journal publications.
Dr. Beachy has received a number of honors for
his research. He is a member of the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences and in 2001
received the Wolf Prize in Agriculture. He is a
fellow in the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, the American Academy of
Microbiology, and the Academy of Science of St.
Louis. In 2003, he was elected Councilor for the
National Academy of Sciences and currently
serves as a member of the editorial board of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Dr Beachy was awarded the Dennis Robert Hoagland
Award from the American Society of Plant
Biologists, an honorary Doctor of Science degree
from Michigan State University, and the William
D. Phillips Technology Advancement Award from
the St. Louis County Economic Council. Dr.
Beachy was named R&D Magazine's Scientist of the
Year for 1999. In 1995, the San Diego Press Club
recognized him with a Headliner of the Year
Award. He was the 1991 recipient of the Bank of
Delaware's Commonwealth Award for Science and
Industry and the 1990 recipient of the American
Phytopathological Society's Ruth Allen Award.
Dr. Beachy serves on numerous boards and
committees, including the board of the
International Crops Research Institute for the
Semi-Arid Tropics in Hyderabad, India, and the
board of the NIDUS Center for Scientific
Enterprise, and other voluntary boards in the
St. Louis region. He is a member of a number of
scientific societies, including the American
Society of Plant Biologists, American
Phytopathological Society, American Society for
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and American
Society for Virology. He has served as
consultant in plant biotechnology for a several
companies and frequently lectures on the
applications of biotechnology in agriculture,
nutrition, and human health.
Dr. Beachy holds a Ph.D. in plant pathology from
Michigan State University and earned a B.A. in
biology from Goshen College in Goshen, Indiana.
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