Craig Venter, a key figure in sequencing the human genome and advancing synthetic biology, has died at age 79. The J. Craig Venter Institute announced his death followed a brief hospitalization for side effects from cancer treatment. Venter leaves a legacy of breakthroughs and controversies in genomics.
Craig Venter, founder of the J. Craig Venter Institute, died following a brief hospitalization for unexpected side effects from treatment of recently diagnosed cancer, the institute said. He was 79. Venter played a leading role in sequencing the human genome and later pioneered work in synthetic biology, driving both major advances and debates over commercializing research and treating science as a race. His path to prominence began after serving as a war orderly in Vietnam, which motivated him to pursue biomedical research at the National Institutes of Health in the 1980s. There, he pioneered automated sequencing of expressed sequence tags, sparking early controversy when he sought to patent them despite unknown functions. In 1998, frustrated by the pace of the publicly funded Human Genome Project launched in 1990, Venter founded Celera. His team employed shotgun sequencing—shattering DNA into random fragments for computer reassembly—contrasting the HGP's methodical Sanger approach. Both efforts announced draft human genome sequences in 2000, with publications following in 2001, though Celera initially withheld some data for commercialization. Post-genome, Venter's yacht Sorcerer II collected global seawater samples from 2004 to 2006, revealing millions of proteins and over 1,000 new families. In 2010, his team created a synthetic cell by inserting a lab-made genome into Mycoplasma capricolum, replacing its original from Mycoplasma mycoides. The cell thrived, marking a milestone in synthetic life, though critics questioned its practical value. Venter later worked on minimal genomes, uncovering many essential genes of unknown function. His enormous impact on genomics, biology, and biodiversity will shape scientific history.