Patrick H. O'Farrell
O'Farrell in 2005
Alma materMcGill University
Known forTwo Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis
Scientific career
Fieldsbiology

Patrick H. O'Farrell is a molecular biologist who made crucial contribution to the development of 2-dimensional protein electrophoresis[1] and Drosophila genetics. He is now a professor of Biochemistry at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF)[2] and has a h-index of 67.[3]

Education

O'Farrell received his bachelor of science in 1969 from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. He then went on to graduate school at the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he worked with Larry Gold.

Major contributions

To optimize the resolution of the Electrophoresis of the proteins, O'Farrell needed to separate the proteins according to independent parameters. Two parameters were used:

  • isoelectric focusing in the first dimension
  • sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the second dimension.

This permitted the simultaneous determination of molecular weight and isoelectric point for the proteins. Because the two parameters are unrelated, it was possible to obtain an almost uniform distribution of protein spots across the two-dimensional gel. Using his technique, O'Farrell was able to resolve 1100 different components from Escherichia coli and predicted his system should be capable of resolving up to 5000 proteins.

References

  1. O'Farrell, Patrick H (Dec 2008). "The pre-omics era: the early days of two-dimensional gels". Proteomics. Germany. 8 (23–24): 4842–52. doi:10.1002/pmic.200800719. PMC 2731566. PMID 19003855.
  2. O'Farrell Lab Web page
  3. O'Farrell in Google Scholars



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