Awards & Winners

Kary Mullis

Date of Birth 28-December-1944
Place of Birth Lenoir
(Caldwell County, North Carolina, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as kary_mullis, Kary Barker Mullis
Profession Chemist
Kary Banks Mullis is a Nobel Prize-winning American biochemist, author, and lecturer. In recognition of his improvement of the polymerase chain reaction technique, he shared the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Michael Smith and earned the Japan Prize in the same year. The process was first described by Kjell Kleppe and 1968 Nobel laureate H. Gobind Khorana, and allows the amplification of specific DNA sequences. The improvements made by Mullis allowed PCR to become a central technique in biochemistry and molecular biology, described by The New York Times as "highly original and significant, virtually dividing biology into the two epochs of before P.C.R. and after P.C.R." Since winning the Nobel Prize, Mullis has been criticized in The New York Times for promoting ideas in areas in which he has no expertise. He has promoted AIDS denialism, climate change denial and his belief in astrology.

Awards by Kary Mullis

Check all the awards nominated and won by Kary Mullis.

1993


Nobel Prize in Chemistry
(for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method)

1991


Gairdner Foundation International Award
(For his discovery of the polymerase chain reaction.)