After secondary school in Hadera, Moshe Yaniv studied
chemistry at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1956-1961) and obtained a "Master of Sciences" in organic chemistry. He joined Professor
François Gros' laboratory at the Institute of Physico-chemical Biology to prepare a state
thesis in science (1969) on the mechanisms of protein synthesis and the structure of
tRNAs. During his thesis he spent six months in
Frederick Sanger's laboratory at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in
Cambridge England, to establish the sequence of several tRNAs and contributed to the establishment of the three-dimensional structure of the tRNA. At the end of his thesis he then joined Professor
Paul Berg's laboratory at
Stanford University in
California for a postdoctoral fellowship continuing his work on the structure and functions of tRNAs. Back in France in 1972, he joined the Institut Pasteur as team leader and then as head of the Oncogenic Virus Unit (1975). In 1966, he was appointed Head of Research at the
CNRS, in 1972 he became Director of Research and Professor at the Institut Pasteur in 1986. During his career at the Institut Pasteur, he headed the Molecular Biology Department (1986-1988) and the
Biotechnology Department (1992-1994). == Scientific work ==