A. Jamie Cuticchia

A. Jamie Cuticchia
Born (1966-12-28) December 28, 1966
Washington D.C., United States
Occupation Scientist
Geneticist
Lawyer
Author
Years active 1987–present

A. Jamie Cuticchia, Ph.D., J.D. is an American Scientist and Lawyer with expertise in the fields of genetics, bioinformatics, and genomics. In particular, he was responsible for the collection of the data constituting the human gene map, prior to the final sequencing of the genome. He is also a practicing attorney.

Early life

He was born Anthony James Cuticchia Jr. on December 28, 1966 and grew up in College Park, Maryland. He received his B.A. in Biological Sciences, with honors, from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County in 1987. In March 1992, he completed his Ph.D. in Genetics at the University of Georgia studying under population scientist Jonathan Arnold. He went on to receive a J.D. magna cum laude, from the North Carolina Central School of Law in 2009.

Accomplishments

In the late 1980s Cuticchia applied the probabilistic metaheuristic method of simulated annealing as a method for genomic mapping. Through the use of binary fingerprinting of DNA (assigning the presence or absence of a particular sequence a 1/0) it was possible to quickly map the genome of Aspergillus nidulans. This was one of the first genomes physically mapped [1][2][3][4]

In addition to his work in the development of mapping tools, in 1988, along with others, he applied the Markov chain model to predict the occurrence of DNA patterns.[5]

He was the original Data Manager of the GDB Human Genome Database and served as its director both in Toronto at The Hospital for Sick Children as well as at RTI International.[6][7] He has published several books on the human genome during the genetic mapping phase of the human genome project.

Career

Biotechnology involvement

Cuticchia was a scientific founder of New Chemical Entities, a drug discovery and information company founded in 1997. In 1999 it merged with Thetagen, a provided of pharmacogenomic services.[8] New Chemical Entities was merged with Albany Molecular Research in 2001.[9]

Awards

He has won numerous awards including:

Bibliography

Books

References

  1. R. A. Prade, J. Griffith, K. Kochut, J. Arnold and W. E. Timberlake, In vitro reconstruction of the Aspergillus (= Emericella) nidulans genome. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94 (1997), pp. 14564–14569
  2. Cuticchia AJ, Arnold J, Timberlake WE. ODS: ordering DNA sequences--a physical mapping algorithm based on simulated annealing. Comput Appl Biosci. 1993 Apr;9(2):215-9.
  3. Cuticchia AJ, Arnold J, Timberlake WE. The use of simulated annealing in chromosome reconstruction experiments based on binary scoring. Genetics. 1992 Oct;132(2):591-601.
  4. Brody H, Griffith J, Cuticchia AJ, Arnold J, Timberlake WE. Chromosome-specific recombinant DNA libraries from the fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Nucleic Acids Res. 1991 Jun 11;19(11):3105-9.
  5. Arnold J, Cuticchia AJ, Newsome DA, Jennings WW 3rd, Ivarie R. Mono- through hexanucleotide composition of the sense strand of yeast DNA: a Markov chain analysis. Nucleic Acids Res. 1988 Jul 25;16(14B):7145-58.
  6. http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/publicat/hgn/v10n1/hgn101_2.pdf
  7. RTI International, TeleChem/ArrayIt, CuraGen, Health Discovery, University of California | BioInform | Informatics | GenomeWeb
  8. New Chemical Entities, Inc. and Thetagen, Inc. Merge - re> FRAMINGHAM, Mass., and BOTHELL, Wash., Sept. 15 /PRNewswire/
  9. Albany Molecular Research, Inc. Completes Acquisition of New Chemical Entities, Inc. - Free Online Library
  10. https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/News_Folder/caBIG_AwardeePDF.pdf
  11. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2009-08-13.
  12. The 2003 Genome Technology All-Stars | Genome Technology | GenomeWeb

External links

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