It'll Never Fly: When Gene Names Are TOO Fun

Published: July 7, 2021, 11 a.m.

b'In 1910, a fruit fly geneticist named Thomas Hunt Morgan noticed something strange in one of his specimens. Out of his many, many fruit flies\\u2014all with brilliant red eyes\\u2014a single fly had white eyes. This fruit fly turned out to be a very big deal. From those white eyes, Morgan eventually figured out that genes can be sex-linked, confirmed that genes exist on chromosomes, and won the Nobel prize.\\nBut he also cemented his legacy another way, with what he chose to name that gene: "white". It might sound uninspired, but it kicked off a tradition that decades later gave us names like spatzle, hamlet, and ken and barbie. Here and there, a name went too far, but overall, fanciful names brought joy to researchers and worked well until genes like these were discovered in humans, and everything went awry.\\nJohanna and Senior Producer Elah Feder team up with Helen Zaltzman of The Allusionist to talk about fruit flies, genes, and whether it\\u2019s ok to name a gene after a German noodle.\\nPlus, after much demand, we bring you... the origin of "defenestration"!\\nGuests:\\nHelen Zaltzman is the host of\\xa0The Allusionist.\\nCredits:\\nScience Diction is produced by Johanna Mayer and Senior Producer Elah Feder. Our composer is Daniel Peterschmidt. Nadja Oertelt is our Chief Content Officer.'