Frans Alfons Janssens

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62

Who is Frans Alfons Janssens?

Frans Alfons Janssens. Ordained as a priest in 1886, he obtained a PhD in Natural Science with the highest honors and a scholarship to attend the most prestigious foreign laboratories. He worked with Professor Kjeldahl at the Hansen Institute Carlsberg Brewery in Copenhagen and was a teacher at the St. Lawrence Brewery School in Ghent. In 1896, he became a professor at the Faculty of Sciences for the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, as a chair in microscopy and later in cytology, succeeding Jean-Baptiste Carnoy in the chair. He is the discoverer of the crossing-over of genes during meiosis, which he called 'chiasmatypie'. His work was continued by the Nobel Prize winner Thomas Hunt Morgan to develop the theory of genetic linkage.

He was also president of the Societé Belge de Biologie and a Canon at the Sint-Baafskathedraal in Ghent.

In 1953, the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven founded the 'F.A.Janssens Genetics Laboratory', in recognition for the scientific merits of Frans Alfons Janssens. The laboratory is known as the 'Center for Microbial and Plant Genetics'.

Janssens was the son of politician Theodoor Janssens.

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Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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