Swapan Kumar Datta is a (Professor) of rice biotechnology who focuses on genetic engineering of Indica rice. Datta has demonstrated the development of genetically engineered Indica rice from protoplast derived from haploid embryogenic cell suspension culture.[1] Golden Indica Rice with enriched Provitamin A and Ferritin rice with high iron content were developed by his group with a vision to meet the challenges of malnutrition in developing countries.[2][3] Datta has been named as one among the top 25 Indian scientists from all fields of science by India Today.[4]
Swapan Kumar Datta | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Presidency University University of Calcutta Cornell University |
Known for | Genetic engineering of Indica Rice |
Spouse(s) | Karabi Datta (Reader, University of Calcutta) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Agricultural science |
Institutions |
Currently,[when?] Datta is serving as the Founder Vice-Chancellor of the Biswa Bangla Biswabidyalay, Bolpur, West Bengal.[5] Before taking the present responsibility, he was the Vice-Chancellor of the Visva-Bharati University (a Central University founded by the great Rabindranath Tagore), Santiniketan, West Bengal, India. Datta had served as Deputy Director General (DDG-Crop Science) in Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), New Delhi. He was also 'Sir Rash Behari Ghosh Chair Professor' at the Department of Botany, University of Calcutta, Kolkata, India.[6]
Early life and education
editDatta received his Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree in Botany (Honours) in 1972 from Presidency College (presently Presidency University), Calcutta. He completed Master of Science (MSc) in Botany from University of Calcutta in the year 1974. From the same university, he obtained PhD degree in 1980. He also completed a course on Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) from Cornell University, USA in 2003.
Career
editAt the early stage, Datta was associated as a lecturer in botany with Ramkrishna Mission, Vivekananda Centenary College, West Bengal, India from 1976 to 1979. Then he joined Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal as a lecturer and became Reader in Botany in 1985 and served there up to 1989. During the time, he moved to Germany with the prestigious DAAD fellowship and worked with Prof. G. Wenzel. He then took up an assignment as a senior scientist at Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland. In 1987, he became the group leader and senior scientist at ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Datta worked over there on rice genetic engineering for six years and was associated with Prof. Ingo Potrykus. Meanwhile, he spent six months as visiting Associate Professor at University of California, Davis, USA. For a short span of time in 1993, he joined as a staff research scientist at International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), New Delhi. Datta moved to join International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), Manila, Philippines as Senior Plant Biotechnologist in 1993. During IRRI tenure, he became the HarvestPlus Rice crop Leader.[7] He returned to India in 2005 to join as Sir Rash Behari Ghosh Chair Professor at the University of Calcutta. He established Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Laboratory and became the coordinator of Translational Rice Research Programme funded by DBT, Govt. of India. In 2009, he was appointed as DDG (Crop Science), ICAR, the apex body of India for coordinating, guiding, and managing research and education in agriculture, and served there up to 30.01.2015. From 31 January 2015, he started working as the Pro-Vice Chancellor (SAHA UPACHARYA) in the Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal.[8] Later, Datta had become the Vice-Chancellor of the Visva-Bharati University. For a while, he held a DBT-Distinguished Biotechnology Research Professor position at the University of Calcutta, Kolkata, India. In 2020, Datta has become the Founder Vice-Chancellor of the Biswa Bangla Biswabidyalay, West Bengal, India.
Awards and honours
edit- DAAD Fellow, Germany- 1985
- FMI Fellow, Switzerland- 1987
- Panchanan Maheshwari Medal (Experimental Embryology and Plant Biotechnology), Indian Botanical Society- 2006.[9]
- Paul Johannes Bruhl Memorial Medal, Asiatic Society- 2010
- TATA Innovation Fellow- 2007
- CGIAR Science Award for the work on the enhanced iron and zinc accumulation in transgenic indica rice.
- Indian Science Congress Association (ISCA) platinum Jubilee lecture award
- Dr. B P Pal Memorial Lecture Award 2023, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi [10]
- Member of Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC), Govt. of India.[11]
- Member of the task force, GMO Biosafety Committee, Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India
- Member of the Review Committee on Genetic Manipulation (RCGM), DBT, Govt. of India.[12]
- Chairman, Agricultural Commission, West Bengal, India
- Elected Fellow of Indian National Science Academy (INSA), New Delhi.[13]
- Elected Fellow of National Academy of Sciences, India (NASI), Allahabad.[14]
- Elected Fellow of National Academy of Agricultural Sciences, India (NAAS), New Delhi.[15]
- Elected Fellow of The World Academy of Sciences (TWAS).[16][17][18]
- Elected Fellow of West Bengal Academy of Science and Technology (WAST).[19]
- Honorary Fellow of Association of Rice Research Workers (ARRW), Cuttack, India
Significant contributions
edit- He was the pioneer worker to develop genetically engineered fertile homozygous Indica rice plant from protoplast.[20]
- Engineered "Golden" Indica rice with genes for β-carotene synthesis.[21]
- Engineered rice with ferritin gene for high iron content.[22]
- Pioneering report on field evaluation of hybrid Bt-rice in China.[23]
- Worked on characterization of sd1 gene responsible for green revolution.[24]
- Developed marker free transgenic Indica rice cultivar.[25][26]
- He developed bacterial blight resistant transgenic rice plant which has been field evaluated in India, Philippines and China.[27]
- Developed Bt-rice resistant against Yellow Stem Borer.[28][29]
- Demonstrated in vitro laticifer differentiation in Calotropis gigantea.[30]
- Developed transgenic cultivars resistant to bacterial blight, yellow stem borer and sheath blight by gene pyramiding.[31]
- Pioneered the development of genetically engineered rice plants with enhanced sheath blight resistance.[32]
Recent works
editHis recent research interests include the following:
- RNAi mediated silencing and development of low phytate and low lipoxigenase rice.[33][34]
- Development of drought and salinity tolerant rice variety.[35]
- Development of transgenic rice plants with enhanced resistance to sheath blight.[36]
- Cytology, genetic transformation system and development of transgenic Jute plant.[37][38]
- Development of insect-resistant Chickpea plant.[39]
International activities
editHe was associated as a member of scientific committees across the world at several times including the International Society for Plant Molecular Biology and the International Association for Plant Tissue Culture and Biotechnology, and worked as principal investigator of several internationally funded research projects, such as the Rockefeller Foundation (USA), United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA), (Denmark), BMZ/GTZ (Germany). He supervised more than 30 PhD students and many other post-doctoral fellows from China, the Philippines, Switzerland, Myanmar, Bangladesh and India. He is actively engaged in Global Agriculture-Policy including Intellectual Property Rights.
Research paper and books
editSwapan Kumar Datta has published more than 150 research articles, book chapters and review articles in international peer reviewed journals. He published several papers in reputed journals like Science, Nature, Nature Biotechnology, Plant Biotechnology Journal, Plant Journal, Molecular Plant Pathology, Theoritical and Applied Genetics, PLoS ONE, Annals of Botany, Plant Molecular Biology, Phytochemistry. He edited two books, viz. "Rice Improvement in the Genomics Era" (CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, USA))[40] and "Pathogenesis-Related Proteins in Plants" (CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, USA)[41]
External links
edit- Gung-ho on Grain: Swapan Kumar Datta- India Today
- Delay in GM research affects investments: Swapan Datta- The Hindu
- “Shouldn’t be disheartened as GM will take time”: Swapan Datta Archived 2 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine- Biospectrum
- Genetically Modified Food: Reality and Misconceptions: Dr. Swapan Datta-tennews.in
- Anti-GM Protesters Don't Seem to Understand Science: Dr. Swapan Datta-Outlook
- 'So far, all GM crops released to the environment have gone through all testing and there was no report ever that any GM crop caused any damage to the environment': Dr. Datta- LOS BANOS
- 'Public-private partnership important in Indian GM crop regime': Swapan Datta-Business Standard, News-IANS
- "Profile of Top 25 scientists in India". India Today. 11 September 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
- 'Philippines becomes first country to approve Golden Rice for planting'
References
edit- ^ Nature Biotechnology8,736-740 (1990)doi:10.1038/nbt0890-736
- ^ Plant Biotechnology Journal, Volume 4, Issue 4, pages 467–475, July 2006
- ^ Plant Science, Volume 164, Issue 3, March 2003, Pages 371–378
- ^ "Profile of Top 25 scientists in India".
- ^ "Push for Biswa Bangla University in Santiniketan".
- ^ "Home". caluniv.ac.in.
- ^ Rice Today (2004). IRRI. Volume 3(1).page- 5
- ^ "Pro-Vice-Chancellor".
- ^ http://www.indianbotsoc.in/page.php?id=13 [dead link ]
- ^ "30th Dr. B P Pal Memorial Lecture 2023". YouTube.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Committees". Archived from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
- ^ http://www.insaindia.org.in/det.php?id=P14-1641
- ^ "The National Academy of Sciences, India - Fellows". Archived from the original on 17 July 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
- ^ "National Academy of Agricultural Sciences".
- ^ "Forty-six new TWAS Fellows". 26 October 2014.
- ^ "Indian Scholars Elected as TWAS Fellows".
- ^ "Indian Scholars Elected as TWAS Fellows | Vien Khoa Hoc Ky Thuat Nong Nghiep Mien Nam".
- ^ http://www.iicb.res.in/wast/elecfelw_2013.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ Nature Biotechnology8, 736–740 (1990)doi:10.1038/nbt0890-736
- ^ Plant Biotechnology Journal, Volume 4, Issue 4, pages 467–475, July 2006
- ^ Plant Science, Volume 164, Issue 3, March 2003, Pages 371–378
- ^ Nature Biotechnology 18, 1101–1104 (1 October 2000)
- ^ Nature 416, 701–702 (18 April 2002)doi:10.1038/416701a
- ^ Plant Biotechnology Journal (2003) 1:155-165
- ^ Plant Biotechnology Journal (2006) 4:467-475
- ^ Theoretical and Applied Genetics (1998) 97:31-36
- ^ Theoretical and Applied Genetics (1998) Volume 97, Issue 1-2, pp 20–30
- ^ Plant Biotechnology (2001) 8(2):125-133
- ^ Annals of Botany (1986) 57:403-406
- ^ Theoritical and Applied Genetics (2002) 106:1-8
- ^ Nature Biotechnology 13, 686–691 (1995) doi:10.1038/nbt0795-686
- ^ PLoS ONE (2013) 8(7): e68161. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0068161
- ^ Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture (2014), DOI 10.1007/s11240-014-0476-6
- ^ Plant Biotechnology Journal (2012) 10, pp. 579–586
- ^ Molecular Plant Pathology (2013) 14(9), 910–922
- ^ Plant Cell Tissue Organ Culture (2014), DOI 10.1007/s11240-014-0484-6
- ^ Genet Resour Crop Evol. (2014) doi: 10.1007/s10722-014-0099-0
- ^ Theoretical and Applied Genetics (2014), 127(12), pp 2555-2565
- ^ "Rice Improvement in the Genomics Era".
- ^ "Pathogenesis-Related Proteins in Plants".