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Genomics Pioneer Craig J. Venter Dies at 79 in San Diego

His privately financed push for faster DNA sequencing reshaped how genomics gets done.

Overview

  • His institute said Wednesday’s death followed a short hospital stay after unexpected side effects from therapy for a recently diagnosed cancer.
  • J. Craig Venter Institute president Anders Dale praised his drive and said the institute will carry his genomics mission forward through broad partnerships.
  • Venter accelerated the Human Genome Project by launching Celera in 1998 and using whole‑genome shotgun sequencing, which shreds DNA into many pieces and lets computers reassemble the full code.
  • He later led the creation of the first bacterium with a computer‑designed synthetic genome in 2010, marking a major step for engineering life at the genetic level.
  • Techniques popularized through his work now support common medical tools such as tumor gene profiling, genetic tests for inherited disease, and vaccine design based on pathogen sequences.