Lewis Wolpert

Lewis Wolpert
Wolpert sitting behind a microphone
Born19 October 1929
Died28 January 2021 (aged 91)
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity of Witwatersrand (BSc)
Imperial College London
King's College London (PhD)
Known forPositional-value concept in biological development
French flag model
ChildrenDaniel Mark Wolpert, Miranda Wolpert
AwardsHamburger prize for education – American Soc.Dev.Biol.
Michael Faraday Prize (2000)
Royal Medal (2018)
Scientific career
FieldsDevelopmental biology
InstitutionsUniversity College London (Emeritus Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology)
Doctoral studentsJim Smith[1][2]
Websitewww.ucl.ac.uk/cdb/research/wolpert

Lewis Wolpert CBE FRS FRSL FMedSci (19 October 1929 – 28 January 2021) was a South African-born British developmental biologist, author, and broadcaster. Wolpert popularized his French flag model of embryonic development, using the colours of the French flag as a visual aid to explain how embryonic cells interpret genetic code for expressing characteristics of living organisms and explaining how signalling between cells early in morphogenesis could inform cells with the same genetic regulatory network of their position and role.

He wrote several science books, including: Triumph of the Embryo (1991), Malignant Sadness (1999), Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast: the Evolutionary Origins of Belief (2006), and How We Live And Why We Die: The Secret Lives of Cells (2009).

  1. ^ Weston, K. (2010). "The accidental biologist: an interview with Jim Smith". Disease Models & Mechanisms. 3 (1–2): 11–14. doi:10.1242/dmm.004952. PMID 20075376. S2CID 196585824.
  2. ^ Smith, James Cuthbert (1979). Studies of positional signalling along the antero - posterior axis of the developing chick limb (PhD thesis). University College London (University of London). OCLC 500567020.