BARBARAMcCLINTOCK

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1983

Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society

Throughout her career, Barbara McClintock studied the cytogenetics of maize, making discoveries so far beyond the understanding of the time that other scientists essentially ignored her work for more than a decade. But she persisted, trusting herself and the evidence under her microscope.

A few labelled samples of Barbara McClintock's maize, with microscope Smithsonian Institution. National Museum of American History

Corn Stalk Specimens

Corn stalk specimen Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society

Barbara McClintock almost didn’t go to college. She was a talented student, but her mother believed a college degree would harm her chances of marriage and vetoed her plan to go to Cornell.

The McClintock children, ca. 1907. Barbara McClintock is second from the right Source: National Institutes of Health. Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society. Photographer unknown

A McClintock family photograph, ca. 1914 Barbara McClintock is third from the right, leaning on the piano Source: National Institutes of Health. Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Fortunately, McClintock’s father returned from the Army Medical Corps in France in time to intervene. In 1919, at the age of 17, McClintock enrolled in the Cornell College of Agriculture. She thrived at college: she joined the student government, played banjo in a jazz band, and excelled in the classroom. It was there that she took the course that would change the course of her life: genetics.

Barbara McClintock in 1923, when she received her bachelor's degree from Cornell University Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library

Genetics as a discipline was still new in the 1920s; Cornell offered only one undergraduate course. But McClintock took to it immediately, conceiving a lifelong interest in the field of cytogenetics – the study of chromosomes and their genetic expression.

No two plants are exactly alike. They’re all different, and as a consequence, you have to know that difference. I start with the seedling and I don’t want to leave it. I don’t feel I really know the story if I don’t watch the plant all the way along. So I know every plant in the field. I know them intimately. And I find it a great pleasure to know them.

BARBARA McCLINTOCK

A letter from Lewis Stadler (pictured) to Milislav Demerec. A close friend and supporter from Cornell days, Stadler had helped McClintock procure a position at the University of Missouri. Six years later, Demerec brought her to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on leave from the university. Stadler writes that although he wants McClintock to return to Missouri, "I hope she will stay at Cold Spring Harbor if she is convinced that would be better for her work." Courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Barbara McClintock's colleague and supporter Lewis Stadler, with geneticist Esther M. Lederberg at the University of Missouri in the 1950s Courtesy of Joshua Lederberg

She earned her bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees at Cornell and had great success in her research on the cytogenetics of maize. Even so, it wasn’t easy to find a permanent position in the midst of the Depression. Finally, McClintock was hired as an assistant professor at the University of Missouri in 1936.

Corn ear specimen photographed in 1945 Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

McClintock loved working in the lab. “I was just so interested in what I was doing I could hardly wait to get up in the morning and get at it,” she once said.

Barbara McClintock in the lab at Cold Spring Harbor in 1947 Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

But for her, teaching was a distraction. She left her university job in 1941 for Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a research facility funded by the Carnegie Institution. Freed to focus exclusively on her experiments, McClintock stayed at Cold Spring Harbor until her retirement in 1967 – and even beyond, as a scientist emerita, until her death at the age of 90.

Early in her research at Cold Spring Harbor, McClintock began to study the mosaic colour patterns of maize at the genetic level. She had noted that the kernel patterns were too unstable, and changed too frequently over the course of several generations, to be considered mutations. What was responsible for this? The answer contradicted prevailing genetic theory.

Corn Specimens

Labelled maize. Barbara McClintock discovered that genes could "jump" by studying generational mutations in maize. Courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Photo: Jan Eve Olsson.

An illustration of corn kernel specimens, included in Barbara McClintock's article in the 'Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology' in 1951 Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society

As McClintock observed by studying successive generations of maize plants, instead of being locked into place giving fixed instructions from generation to generation, some genes could move around or “transpose” within chromosomes, switching physical traits on or off according to certain “controlling elements.”

Aware that her work departed from the common wisdom, McClintock put off publishing her theories on genetic transposition and controlling elements until other researchers had confirmed her results. At last, in the summer of 1951, she gave a lecture on her findings at the annual symposium at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. It didn’t go well. As she later recalled it, the audience was either perplexed by or hostile to her theories. “They thought I was crazy, absolutely mad.”

(Audio) From the video: 'Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame' Courtesy Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame (Image) Barbara McClintock inspecting one of her cornfields at Cold Spring Harbor Courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

I just knew I was right. Anybody who had had that evidence thrown at them with such abandon couldn’t help but come to the conclusions I did about it.

BARBARA McCLINTOCK

In the face of such resistance to her theories, McClintock stopped publishing and lecturing – she stopped trying to convince others – but she never stopped pursuing her theories. “I just knew I was right,” she said later. “Anybody who had had that evidence thrown at them with such abandon couldn’t help but come to the conclusions I did about it.”

McClintock's diagram of the BreakageFusionBridge cycle Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Corn specimens photographed in 1966, when Barbara McClintock was studying the evolution of maize in South America Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Finally, in the mid-1960s, the scientific community began to come to the same conclusions, validating her findings and giving her the credit that was long overdue. McClintock received the Nobel Prize more than 30 years after making the discoveries for which she was honoured.

McClintock with Colleagues

Almiro Blumenschein, Angel Kato and Barbara McClintock with research notes, working on the Rockefeller-funded races of maize project, November 1966 Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Over the many years, I truly enjoyed not being required to defend my interpretations. I could just work with the greatest of pleasure. I never felt the need nor the desire to defend my views. If I turned out to be wrong, I just forgot that I ever held such a view. It didn't matter.

BARBARA McCLINTOCK

Barbara McClintock made discovery after discovery over the course of her long career in cytogenetics. But she is best remembered for discovering genetic transposition (“jumping genes”). Understanding the phenomenon is still fundamental to understanding genetics, as well as related concepts in medicine, evolutionary biology, and more.

McClintock Examining Specimens

Barbara McClintock in the lab at Cold Spring Harbor, April 1963 National Institutes of Health. Courtesy of the Barbara McClintock Papers, American Philosophical Society. Photographer unknown

Beyond her discoveries, though, McClintock’s legacy is one of uncommon persistence. As she put it, “If you know you are on the right track, if you have this inner knowledge, then nobody can turn you off... no matter what they say.”