Monica Riley
Monica Riley (1926 – October 11, 2013) was an American scientist who contributed to the discovery of messenger RNA in her Ph.D work with Arthur Pardee, and was later a pioneer in the exploration and computer representation of the Escherichia coli genome. CareerAfter graduating from Smith College with a chemistry degree in 1947, she studied Biochemistry at University of California Berkeley with Pardee.[1][2] Her Ph.D. work, together with the PaJaMo experiment, ruled out ribosomes as carriers of information to synthesize protein, leading to the discovery of messenger RNA.[3] After holding faculty positions at University of California Davis and Stony Brook University, she moved to the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, staying there until age 80.[2] As a senior scientist at MBL she was one of the four founding faculty members of the Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution led by Mitchell Sogin.[4] During this time, she co-founded the EcoCyc database of Escherichia coli metabolism,[5] leading the curation of metabolic pathways and genome information for Escherichia coli for over a decade,[6] and developed classification systems for genes and proteins (including MultiFun), which were forerunners of gene ontology.[1][2] Selected publications
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