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Profile of Hwang
Woo-suk
Fifty-two-year-old Hwang recently became the central
character of the ethical and autenticity scandals surrounding his team's stem
cell research.
Earlier Hwang once was lavished praised all over the
country as national hero for his epoch-making stem cell research.
Like a film or singer superstar, Hwang's name
appeared in localmedia very often in the past two years.
Born on Dec. 15, 1953 in a farmer's family of South
Chungcheong Province of South Korea, Hwang is the fifth child of a poor
family.
Thanks to his uncle's financial support, he went to
Daejeon, a city located some 200 kilometers south to Seoul, to have his junior
middle school study.
He was enrolled by Veterinary Medicine Department of
Seoul National University(SNU), on of South Korean most renowned universities,
in 1972.
When he was 29, he obtained Ph.D in veterinary
medicine in the year of 1981 at the SNU.
He went to Hokkaido University of Japan, which was
the world's leading competitor in artificial fertilization, in 1984.
There, Hwang met with world famous professors in
cloning sectorand held conversation with them. He relized clone is the most
promising research in the bioengineering sector.
In 1987, he became a SNU professor and started his
hard research work with working 17-18 hours a day and only four hours sleeping.
After years of such intensive researchs, he made South Korea's first test-tube
cow in 1993.
In 1999, he claimed his team cloned a pair of cows
for the first time in South Korea and the fifth in the world.
He claimed his team successfuly cloned pigs in 2002
and cultivated four cows that alledged to be resistant to mad cow disease in
December 2004.
His team hit headlines of international media after
its paper on cloning the world's first embryonic stem cell line published
inFebruary 2004 in journal of Science.
In May 2005, his team's second paper was published as
cover story of Sciense. In the paper he claimed his team for the first time in
the world successfully cloned 11 different stem cells tailored to individual
patients, paving the way for future development of therapies for hard-to-cure
diseases, such as diabetes and Parkinsonism.
However, his fame was shadowed when he admitted in
late November 2005 that his two fellow female researchers donated eggs in 2003
and a local hosptial which was responsible for providing human ova for his
rearch paid money to ova donors.
Furthermore, Hwang became center of critics after the
special panel of SUN released two reports over the investigation of autenticity
of his second paper published by Science.
The panel tentatively concluded that Hwang's team
fabricated partial results in the paper published in May 2005 and no
patient-tailored embryonic stem cell lines Hwang's team claimed exists
currently.
He also announced his resignation as head of the
World Stem Cell Hub based in Seoul and offered to give up his professorship at
the SNU respectively in late November and late December of 2005.
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