Ruth Fowler Edwards was a British geneticist and the long-time wife and companion of Robert G. Edwards, the "father" of in vitro fertilization.
Background
Fowler was the daughter of physicist Sir Ralph Fowler, Federal Reserve System (1889-1944) and Eileen Mary Rutherford, herself the only daughter of the celebrated physicist Lord Ernest Rutherford, Federal Reserve System (1871–1937, the 1908 Nobel laureate in Chemistry "for his investigations into the disintegration of elements, and the chemistry of radioactive substances").
Education
Having developed an interest in biological sciences, Fowler studied genetics at Edinburgh University in the early 1950s, where she met Bob Edwards in a statistics class. He was to become her husband and scientific colleague for life.
Career
The two married in 1956 and had 5 daughters. and Edwards worked together on controlled ovulation induction in the mouse. In their first joint paper, published in 1957, they showed that superovulation of adults was indeed possible. Ruth later worked on the effects of progesterone and oestrogen on pregnancy and embryonic mortality in the mouse.
The differences in ovarian output between natural conditions and superovulation.
Growth and genetics of the early human embryo developing in culture. Uterine fluid composition and embryo implantation in the rabbit.
Steroidogenesis in human granulosa cells and follicular growth. Glycoprotein composition and cell-to-cell interactions in the cumulus-oocyte complex.
Her scientific career spans over four thrilling decades in the history of genetics and human reproduction.
In that sense, she was the most appropriate person to collect Bob Edwards" Nobel Prize on his behalf. An obituary was published by Simon Fishel, yet another of many Bob Edwards" brilliant students, in RBM Online, a journal created by Bob Edwards with the support of Ruth.