Career
He served as the assistant director of research at the Linus Pauling Institute prior to founding the Genetic Information Institute. He collaborated with several notable scientists including George Irving Bell, Roy Britten, Temple Smith, and Emile Zuckerkandl. His Erdős number is 3, using the path through Temple Smith and Stanislaw Ulam.
Doctor Jurka is best known for his work on eukaryotic transposable elements (TEs), including the discovery of the major families of Alu elements.
He also proposed the mechanism of Alu proliferation and discovered their paternal transmission. The majority of known types of class II TEs, or deoxyribonucleic acid transposons, were discovered or co-discovered by his team at the Genetic Information Institute, based on deoxyribonucleic acid sequence analysis.
The first one, reported in 2001 with Vladimir Kapitonov, became known as Helitron, which is playing a major role in genomic evolution. In 2006 they reported a study of a new, self-synthesizing transposable element called Polinton or Maverick, which is present many diverse eukaryotes.
More recently, Jurka and his co-workers presented a hypothesis that links the origin of repetitive families (TE families), to population subdivision and speciation based on classical concepts of population genetics.
Repbase is the primary reference database of TEs used in deoxyribonucleic acid annotation and analysis.