Between 1966 and 1969 he worked as a
postdoctoral researcher at the
Salk Institute for Biological Studies in
La Jolla, California. He continued work on its DNA and subsequently the whole genome sequencing. In 1998, the whole genome sequence was published in collaboration with the Genome Institute at
Washington University in St. Louis, so that
C. elegans became the first animal to have its complete genome sequenced. Sulston played a central role in both the
C. elegans sequencing projects. He had argued successfully for the sequencing of
C. elegans to show that large-scale genome sequencing projects were feasible. As sequencing of the worm genome proceeded, the
Human Genome Project began. At this point he was made director of the newly established
Sanger Centre (named after
Fred Sanger), located in
Cambridgeshire, England. In 2000, after the 'working draft' of the human genome sequence was completed, Sulston retired from directing the Sanger Centre. With Georgina Ferry, he narrated his research career leading to the human genome sequence in
The Common Thread: A Story of Science, Politics, Ethics, and the Human Genome (2002).
Awards and honours Sulston was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1986. His certificate of election reads: He was elected an
EMBO Member in 1989 and awarded the
George W. Beadle Award in 2000. In 2001 Sulston gave the
Royal Institution Christmas Lectures on
The Secrets of Life. In 2002, he won the
Dan David Prize and the
Robert Burns Humanitarian Award. Later, he shared the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with
Sydney Brenner and
Robert Horvitz, both of whom he had collaborated with at the MRC
Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB), for their discoveries concerning 'genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death'. One of Sulston's most important contributions during his research years at the LMB was to elucidate the precise order in which cells in
C. elegans divide. In fact, he and his team succeeded in tracing the nematode's entire embryonic cell lineage. In 2004, Sulston received the Golden Plate Award of the
American Academy of Achievement. In 2006, he was awarded the George Dawson Prize in Genetics by
Trinity College Dublin. In 2013, Sulston was awarded the
Royal Society of New Zealand's
Rutherford Memorial Lecture, which he gave on the subject of population pressure. He was appointed a
Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH) in the
2017 Birthday Honours for services to science and society. On 23 October 2017 he was awarded the Cambridge Chemistry Alumni Medal. Sulston was a leading campaigner against the patenting of human genetic information. ==Personal life==