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         Greengard Paul:     more books (34)
  1. Cyclic Nucleotides, Phosphorylated Proteins and Neuronal Function (Distinguished Lecture Series of the Society of General Physiologists, Vol 1) by Paul Greengard, 1978-09
  2. Advances in Biochemical Psychopharmacology. Volume 1 by Erminio., Greengard, Paul Costa, 1972
  3. Fourth International Conference on Cyclic Nucleotides, Brussells, Belgium (Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research) by Jacques E. Dumont, Paul Greengard, 1981-10
  4. Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research by Paul Greengard, 1990-12
  5. Adenylyl Cyclases, Volume 32 (Advances in Second Messenger & Phosphoprotein Research)
  6. Advances in Cyclic Nucleotide and Protein Phosphorylation Research (Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research) by Paul Greengard, 1987-01
  7. Protein Phosphorylation in the Nervous System (The Neurosciences Institute Publications Series) by Eric J. Nestler, Paul Greengard, 1984-08-01
  8. Signal Transduction in Health and Disease, Volume 31 (Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research Series)
  9. Narcotic Antagonists: Advances in Biochemical Psychopharmacology. Volume 8 by Erminio., Greengard, Paul Costa, 1973
  10. Advances in Cyclic Nucleotide Research (Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research) by Paul Greengard, 1980-10
  11. Advances in Cyclic Nucleotide Research; Vol. 4 by Paul; Robison, G. Alan (eds.) Greengard, 1974
  12. Current Methodology (Advances in Cyclic Nucleotide and Protein Phosphorylation Research : Vol 10) by Gary Brooker, Paul Greengard, 1979-06
  13. Molecular & Cellular Mechanisms of Neurotransmitter Release by Lennart Stjarne, Sten E. Grillner, 1994-10-15
  14. Ion Channel Regulation, Volume 33 (Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research)

81. SOF Distinguished Lectures 2001
of slow synaptic transmission , paul greengard, Professor, Rockefeller On December10, 2000, greengard together with University, NY - received the nobel prize
http://www.scripps.edu/services/sof/seminars/distinguished_lectures/annual/2001/
Society of Fellows Distinguished Lectures for 2001
Speakers in 2001:
Daniel Dennett, Tufts University
Paul Greengard, Rockefeller University

Craig Venter, Celera Genomics

Alfred Wittinghofer, Max-Planck Institute
CANCELLED!
James Watson, CSHL

December 19, 4 pm , Valerie Timken Amphitheatre, "How scientists should try to explain the "magic" of consciousness" Daniel Dennett , University Professor, Director, Center for Cognitive Studies Tufts University , MA.
Info on Dennett
November 9, 4 pm, The Valerie Timken Theatre "The neurobiology of slow synaptic transmission" Paul Greengard , Professor, Rockefeller University , New York, NY.
On December 10, 2000, Greengard - together with Arvid Carlsson, University of Gothenburg, SWEDEN, and Eric Kandel, Columbia University, NY - received the Nobel prize. The prize was awarded the three scientists for their contribution to better knowledge about signal transduction in the central nervous system, including dopaminergic neurons, which have been found to be involved in Parkinson's Disease and other sever neurological disorders.

82. John Polanyi Official Website Nobel Statement, Signatories, Statement By Nobel L
on the occasion of the onehundredth anniversary of the nobel Prize. Günter Grass(Literature, 1999); paul greengard (Physiology/Medicine, 2000); Roger Guillemin
http://www.utoronto.ca/jpolanyi/nobelstatement/signatures.html
Signatores, Statement by Nobel Laureates
on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Nobel Prize
  • Zhores I. Alferov (Physics, 2000) Sidney Altman (Chemistry, 1989) Philip W. Anderson (Physics, 1977) Oscar Arias Sanchez (Peace, 1987) J. Georg Bednorz (Physics, 1987) Bishop Carlos F. X. Belo (Peace, 1996) Baruj Benacerraf (Physiology/Medicine, 1980) Hans A. Bethe (Physics, 1967) Gerd K. Binnig (Physics, 1986) James W. Black (Physiology/Medicine, 1988) Guenter Blobel (Physiology/Medicine, 1999) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Physics, 1981) Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970) Paul D. Boyer (Chemistry, 1997) Bertram N. Brockhouse (Physics, 1994) Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) Georges Charpak (Physics, 1992) Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Physics, 1997) John W. Cornforth (Chemistry, 1975) Francis H.C. Crick (Physiology/ Medicine, 1962) James W. Cronin (Physics, 1980) Paul J. Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995) Robert F. Curl (Chemistry, 1996) His Holiness The Dalai Lama (Peace, 1989) Johann Deisenhofer (Chemistry, 1988) Peter C. Doherty (Physiology/Medicine, 1996) Manfred Eigen (Chemistry, 1967)
  • 83. The Gairdner Foundation's Latest News!
    STOCKHOLM (APReuters) - Two Americans and a Swede won the nobel Prize in ArvidCarlsson, paul greengard and Eric Kandel will share the almost $1.4 million
    http://www.gairdner.org/news11.html
    This page contains the latest news releases concerning events which affect The Gairdner Foundation and the illustrious group of scientists who have won either the International Award or The Wightman Award. Reports reprinted are the property of the news institution quoted and can only be used with permission by the author. Foundation press releases may be republished in whole or in part for the benefit of the media and the general public. Home This Year's Winners Past Winners History ... Contact Us Reprinted October 10, 2000 Two Americans, Swede share Nobel
    Research into brain cell communication earns medicine prize

    The Toronto Star STOCKHOLM (AP-Reuters) - Two Americans and a Swede won the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for discoveries about how brain cells communicate - research that laid the groundwork for Prozac and other drugs for depression and Parkinson's disease. Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel will share the almost $1.4 million prize for pioneering work that could lead to new treatments for schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, addiction and other mental disorders. ``The payoffs are potentially enormous,'' said Dr. Stephen Hyman, director of the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health.

    84. Stampa
    Translate this page Stoccolma – Se non ci fossero state le ricerche di Arvid Carlsson, paul Greengarded Eric Kandel, nobel per la Medicina 2000, forse si parlerebbe più di
    http://www.pharmaciaitalia.it/stampa/itevents/archives$daysBack=2
    06 Marzo 2001 Lombardia, fiore all'occhiello della ricerca privata in oncologia 12 Febbraio 2001 Quarto trimestre 2000: l’utile per azione sale del 33 per cento ... Per contattarci Articoli relativi al periodo: dal 03/04/2000 al 06/03/2001 6 marzo 2001
    Lombardia, fiore all'occhiello della ricerca privata in oncologia Nerviano (Milano) - Continua >> 12 febbraio 2001
    Quarto trimestre 2000: l’utile per azione sale del 33 per cento Peapack, New Jersey - Continua >> 8 dicembre 2000
    Stoccolma
    Continua >>
    7 dicembre 2000
    A Carlsson, Greengard e Kandel i Nobel per la Medicina 2000 Stoccolma
    Lo scorso 9 ottobre il Forum Nobel al Karolinka Institutet ha deciso di assegnare congiuntamente il premio Nobel 2000 per la Fisiologia o la Medicina a Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard e Eric Kandel per le loro scoperte riguardanti "la trasduzione del segnale nel sistema nervoso". Continua >> 6 dicembre 2000
    Parkinson: dal Nobel della Medicina ai nuovi trattamenti Stoccolma
    Continua >>
    15 novembre 2000
    III Forum europeo dei Servizi sanitari: verso quale salute? Roma
    Continua >>
    14 novembre 2000 Nuove terapie contro il fumo Roma Continua >> 30 ottobre 2000 III trimestre 2000: l'utile per azione di Pharmacia aumenta del 57 per cento Aumento a due cifre anche per il fatturato farmaceutico (+ 20 per cento) . In particolare: il fatturato farmaceutico passa da 2.734 milioni di USD nel III trimestre 1999 a 3.283 milioni di USD nel III (+ 20 per cento);

    85. NIH Record--5/28/2002--Nobel Laureates To Speak, June 12
    Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series on June 12 will host a doubleheader with twoNobel laureates as the featured speakers. Drs. paul greengard and Eric Kandel
    http://www.nih.gov/news/NIH-Record/05_28_2002/story03.htm
    Front Page Previous Story Next Story Nobel Laureates To Speak, June 12 By Anne Decker The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series on June 12 will host a doubleheader with two Nobel laureates as the featured speakers. Drs. Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel won the prize in physiology or medicine in 2000, along with Dr. Arvid Carlsson of Sweden. They will give the Florence S. Mahoney Lecture on Aging for the National Institute on Aging. Greengard will begin his lecture, "The Neurobiology of Slow Synaptic Transmission," at 2:30 p.m. in Masur Auditorium, Bldg. 10. Kandel will speak at 3:30 p.m. on "Molecular Biology of Memory and Its Disorders: Some Societal Implications." Greengard, who is the Vincent Astor professor and head of the Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience at the Rockefeller University, won the Nobel Prize for his discovery of how dopamine and a number of other transmitters in the brain exert their action in the nervous system. Dr. Paul Greengard

    86. Nobel Prize For Medicine In Mental Health Research
    nobel Prize for Medicine. Three scientists, Arvid Carlsson, paul Greengardand Eric Kandel shared this year’s nobel Price for Medicine.
    http://www.namiscc.org/newsletters/November/Nobel.htm
    NAMI SCC Website
    Nobel Prize for Medicine
    Three scientists, Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel shared this year’s Nobel Price for Medicine. The trio focused on how brain cells communicate, and in particular Carlsson’s work shed light on the new antipsychotic drugs used to treat schizophrenia as well as the SSRI’s used to treat depression and OCD. The Nobel Prize citation stated, “The discoveries of Arvid Carlsson have had great importance for the treatment of depression, which is one of our most common diseases.” Nobel Prize for Medicine Press Release NAMI Article on the 2000 Nobel Prize for medicine. The Nobel Lectures (on-demand video of their lectures given on Friday, December 8, 2000 at Karolinska Institutet, Berzelius laboratoriet, Stockholm)
    Paul Greengard's Lab
    - with summary of research goals and recent publications. Eric Kandel's Lab - summary of research. The future of psychiatry - Eric Kandel say's it lies with biology. Last Updated on 06/30/02 webmaster@namiscc.org var site="sm3NAMISCC" Opinions expressed in this web site do not necessarily reflect the views of NAMI Santa Cruz County, NAMI California or any affiliated organizations. We attempt to present a balanced perspective on issues by presenting multiple viewpoints.

    87. Jewish Nobel Prize Winners In Medicine
    Rodbell (1994); Stanley Prusiner (1997); Robert Furchgott 9 (1998); paul Greengard10 (2000); portrait of her is contained in Sharon McGrayne's nobel Prize Women
    http://www.jinfo.org/Nobels_Medicine.html
    JEWISH NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS IN MEDICINE
    (28% of world total, 40% of US total)
    • Paul Ehrlich (1908) Elie Metchnikoff Otto Meyerhof (1922) Karl Landsteiner (1930) Otto Warburg Otto Loewi (1936) Joseph Erlanger (1944) Herbert Gasser Ernst Chain (1945) Hermann Muller Gerty Cori Tadeus Reichstein (1950) Selman Waksman (1952) Hans Krebs (1953) Fritz Lipmann (1953) Joshua Lederberg (1958) Arthur Kornberg (1959) Konrad Bloch (1964) Francois Jacob (1965) George Wald (1967) Marshall Nirenberg (1968) Salvador Luria (1969) Julius Axelrod (1970) Bernard Katz (1970) Gerald Edelman (1972) David Baltimore (1975) Howard Temin (1975) Baruch Blumberg (1976) Andrew Schally Rosalyn Yalow (1977) Daniel Nathans (1978) Baruj Benacerraf (1980) John Vane Michael Brown (1985) Joseph Goldstein (1985) Stanley Cohen (1986) Rita Levi-Montalcini (1986) Gertrude Elion (1988) Harold Varmus (1989) Edmond Fischer Alfred Gilman (1994) Martin Rodbell (1994) Stanley Prusiner (1997) Robert Furchgott Paul Greengard Eric Kandel (2000) Sydney Brenner (2002) H. Robert Horvitz (2002) Others
    • NOTES
      1. Jewish mother, non-Jewish father.

    88. Nobel-díjasok - Egészségügy + Üzlet Tematikus Portál
    Az idei orvosi nobeldíjat egy amerikai és két brit kutatónak, LelandH. Hartwellnek, R. Timothy Huntnek és paul M. Nurse-nek ítélték oda
    http://www.euuzlet.hu/nobeldijasok.html
    Élettani és orvosi Nobel-díjasok Magyar, illetve magyar származású Nobel-díjasok Név Kategória Év Lénárd Fülöp fizikai Bárány Róbert orvosi Zsigmondy Richárd kémiai Szent-Györgyi Albert orvosi Hevesy György kémiai Békésy György orvosi Wigner Jenõ fizikai Gábor Dénes fizikai Wiesel, Elie béke Polanyi, John C. kémiai Oláh György kémiai Harsányi János közgazd. Kertész Imre irodalmi Szoborparkjuk ( link>>
    Kiosztották az orvosi Nobel-díjakat - 2002. október 7., hétfõ - Forrás: Stop.hu

    Sydney Brenner és John E. Sulston brit, valamint H. Robert Horovitz amerikai kutató nyerte az idei orvosi Nobel-díjat. Az indoklás szerint a kitüntetéssel a szervfejlõdés génszabályozásának és a programozott sejthalálnak a kutatásában elért eredményeiket ismerték el. link>> Magyar Hírlap 2001. október 8. (teljes cikk)
    ,,Orvosi Nobel-díj sejtkutatásért egy amerikainak, két britnek
    Az idei orvosi Nobel-díjat egy amerikai és két brit kutatónak, Leland H. Hartwellnek, R. Timothy Huntnek és Paul M. Nurse-nek ítélték oda sejtkutatásaikért, amelyek az indoklás szerint új lehetõségeket nyithatnak a rák elleni küzdelemben. A Nobel-díjakat hagyományosan december 10-én, a díjalapító Alfred Nobel halálának évfordulóján adják át. Az idei orvosi Nobel-díj értéke mintegy egymillió euró...''
    Év Díjazott(ak) ARVID CARLSSON PAUL GREENGARD és ERIC KANDEL GÜNTER BLOBEL ROBERT F. FURCHGOTT

    89. SR-Nobel Prize For Medicine
    Three medical researchers have won the nobel Prize for Medicine. They are paul Greengardof Rockefeller University in New York City, Eric Kandel of Columbia
    http://www.manythings.org/voa/00/001018sr_t.htm
    Date: 10-18-00
    SCIENCE REPORT - Nobel Prize for Medicine
    By Nancy Steinbach This is the VOA Special English Science Report. Three medical researchers have won the Nobel Prize for Medicine. They are Paul Greengard of Rockefeller University in New York City, Eric Kandel of Columbia University in New York and Arvid Carlsson of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. They will share the prize of more than nine-hundred-thousand dollars from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden. Each man was honored for work that involved the way brain cells communicate. Chemicals carry messages between nerve cells in the brain at special places between the cells. These are called synapses. One of these chemical messengers is a substance called dopamine. Arvid Carlsson was the first to discover that dopamine was the substance involved in this communication. His research led to the recognition that Parkinson's disease is caused by a lack of dopamine in parts of the brain. It also led to the development of the substance L-dopa that is now used to treat the disease. His work also has helped doctors understand and treat brain disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. Doctor Carlsson was a professor at the University of Gothenburg for thirty years. Paul Greengard heads the Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience at Rockefeller University. He discovered how dopamine and other chemicals in the brain act on the nervous system. This work has increased understanding of the action of several drugs on mental conditions like schizophrenia. Doctor Greengard said problems with dopamine levels also could cause learning problems like attention deficit disorder. He said he will give his Nobel Prize money to Rockefeller University for a yearly award to honor women in biomedical research.

    90. NeuroNews - Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine 2000
    Foundation recently announced its winner for the 2000 nobel Prize in paul GreengardLaboratory of Molecular and Cellular Science, Rockefeller University, New
    http://home.earthlink.net/~electrikmonk/Neuro/artNobel2000.htm
    The 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine The Committee honors important research in signal transduction in the nervous system The Nobel Foundation recently announced its winner for the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine. The prestigious honor goes this year to two Americans and a scientist from Sweeden independently made pioneering discoveries concerning second-messenger-mediated signal transduction between nerve cells. The Prize Recipients Arvid Carlsson
    Department of Pharmacology, University of Gothenburg

    Arvid Carlsson is being honored for for his discovery that dopamine is a neurotransmitter in the brain and that it has great importance for regulating movement. His work was a necessary precursor to our understanding of the role that dopamine plays in disease such as Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia. Paul Greengard
    Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Science, Rockefeller University, New York

    Paul Greengard is being honored for his discovery of the intracellular signaling pathways that mediate the postsynaptic effects of dopamine other related neurotransmitters that function via second messenger systems. His work identified key proteins that mediate this process and the importance of phosphorylation states for its regulation. Eric R. Kandel

    91. NIDA NOTES - Research That Provided Key Insights For Drug Abuse
    This year's nobel Prize in Medicine has been awarded to three scientists Dr. PaulGreengard, a neurobiologist at The Rockefeller University in New York City
    http://www.drugabuse.gov/NIDA_Notes/NNVol15N6/Research.html
    International Focus Volume 15, Number 6 (January, 2001)
    Research That Provided Key Insights for Drug Abuse Scientists Takes Nobel Prize
    By Margi Grady , NIDA NOTES Managing Editor Dr. Arvid Carlsson Dr. Greengard received the prize for tracing the biochemical reactions that occur in nerve cells in response to neurotransmitters such as dopamine. This work provided key insights for drug abuse research because drugs of abuse create many of their effects-both pleasurable and dangerous-by altering nerve cells' exposure or reactions to neurotransmitters. For example, methamphetamine and other stimulant drugs increase dopamine exposure, an action which produces feelings of pleasure and, over time, addiction. Dr. Paul Greengard "Dr. Greengard's work has provided essential insights into the basic brain mechanisms of drug abuse and addiction," says Dr. Jonathan Pollock of NIDA's Division of Neuroscience and Behavioral Research. "With NIDA support, Dr. Greengard currently is continuing this line of research, focusing on how cocaine and amphetamine change neurotransmitter function and the responsiveness of nerve cells to transmitters and drugs. Ultimately, this research may make possible treatment medications to prevent or reverse these drugs' effects." Dr. Eric Kandel

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