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         Sharp Phillip A:     more books (43)
  1. J.N. Bartfield Galleries
  2. Colorado bouldering 2 by Phillip Benningfield, 2003
  3. Accidental Wizard by Phillip Keveren, 2009-08-01
  4. Mountain Biking Colorado's Western Slope by Phillip Benningfield, 2000-06
  5. The wives of Henry the Eighth and the parts they played in history; by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, 1905
  6. The great Lord Burghley (William Cecil): A study in Elizabethan statecraft by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, 1906
  7. Through Portugal, by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, 1907
  8. Colorado Bouldering by Phillip Benningfield, 1999-05
  9. Paintings By Julian Alden Weir by Mahonri Sharp , Essay Young, 1972-01-01
  10. The love affairs of Mary queen of Scots;: A political history, by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, 1903
  11. The courtships of Queen Elizabeth: A history of the various negotiations for her marriage by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, 1906
  12. Becky Sharp;: A play in one act, adapted from the Waterloo chapter of "Vanity Fair," by Olive Conway, 1924
  13. Extract of a letter to a gentleman in Maryland;: Wherein is demonstrated the extreme wickedness of tolerating the slave trade, in order to favour the illegalities ... in America. First printed in London in 1793 by Granville Sharp, 1806
  14. A history of Ream Cemetery, 1812-1972 by W. Louis Phillips, 1973

41. Report To The President On The Use Of Technology
phillip sharp, Ph.D. Professor and Head, Department of Biology, MassachusettsInstitute of Technology and 1993 nobel laureate, Physiology or Medicine.
http://www.ostp.gov/PCAST/k-12ed.html
Report to the President on the Use of Technology
to Strengthen K-12 Education in the United States
March 1997
PRESIDENT'S COMMITTEE OF ADVISORS
ON SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Panel on Educational Technology
Panel on Educational Technology
Chairman David E. Shaw, Ph.D.
and Juno Online Services, L.P. Members Henry J. Becker, Ph.D.
Professor of Education,
University of California, Irvine John D. Bransford, Ph.D.
Centennial Professor of Psychology and Co-Director,
Learning Technology Center,
Vanderbilt University Jan Davidson, Ph.D. President, The Davidson Group Jan Hawkins, Ph.D. Director, Center for Children and Technology, Education Development Center Shirley Malcom, Ph.D. Head, Directorate for Education and Human Resources Programs, American Association for the Advancement of Science Mario Molina, Ph.D. Lee and Geraldine Martin Professor of Environmental Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and 1995 Nobel laureate, Chemistry Sally K. Ride, Ph.D. Professor of Physics and Director, California Space Institute, University of California, San Diego

42. Van Andel Institute
Andel Institute and these extraordinarily trained young people engaged in stateof-the-artmedical research. - Dr. phillip sharp, nobel Laureate Member VAI
http://www.vai.org/vai/hoth/
Van Andel Institute Van Andel Legacy News Events ... Site Map "I have no doubt that the Van Andel Institute will become one of the major research enterprises in this country and will be at the forefront of the new revolution." - Dr. Michael Brown
Nobel Laureate
Chairman VAI Board of Scientific Advisors
"Here at VAI, the world's greatest medical detectives will unlock the secrets of molecular and cell biology, genetics and other life sciences. All because of Jay and Betty Van Andel's belief and their willingness to act on that belief." - President Gerald R. Ford
"Because of my personal experience with cancer, I'm proud and pleased to serve as Honorary Chair of the Van Andel Institute's Hope on the Hill Fund. At this institute, basic cancer research is being dome to give hope to the people like my father, brother, two sisters and the world." - President Jimmy Carter
VAI Address
"As we age as a population, cancer will become the most frequent cause of death and will cost this country a fortune. May the spring of cancer research begin in Grand Rapids with the birth of the Van Andel Institute and these extraordinarily trained young people engaged in state-of-the-art medical research."

43. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
The cowinner of the prize, phillip A. sharp of the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, was a clear choice for the nobel committee, according to sources
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1993/1993g.html

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BEHIND NOBEL, A STRUGGLE FOR RECOGNITION
SOME SCIENTISTS SAY COLLEAGUE OF BEVERLY RESEARCHER DESERVED A SHARE OF
MEDICAL PRIZE
Author: By Anthony Flint, Globe Staff Date: Friday, November 5, 1993 Page: Section: NATIONAL/FOREIGN The champagne bottles were uncorked and the television cameras whirred in the atrium of New England Biolabs in Beverly that sunny afternoon of Oct. 11. Hours before, one of the lab's top researchers, Richard J. Roberts, had learned that he had won the Nobel Prize in Medicine, and everyone was beaming. But behind that happy celebration is a tale of an intense competition for recognition among the scientists involved in the work that won the prize, a landmark study on how genes are spliced. The struggle raises new questions about how the scientific community bestows credit for major discoveries. According to several scientists, Louise T. Chow, a Taiwanese researcher who worked with Roberts at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island in 1977, the year the discovery was made, should have shared in the Nobel. Chow operated the electron microscope through which the splicing process was observed and designed the crucial experiment using techniques she developed in the previous two years at the lab. "The evidence she discovered formed an important part of the total creative insight that splicing was taking place. Only she could have interpreted those data," said Norman Davidson, a professor emeritus at the California Institute of Technology and well-known expert in electron microscopy, under whom Chow apprenticed as a graduate student.

44. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
phillip A. sharp, 49, who J. Roberts, 50, research director at New England Biolabsin Beverly, were informed by telephone calls from the nobel committee in
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1993/1993m.html

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TWO FROM MASS. WIN NOBEL FOR MEDICINE
Author: By Anthony Flint, Globe Staff Date: Tuesday, October 12, 1993
Page:
Section:
METRO A professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a researcher at a Beverly biomedical center were named winners of the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for their discoveries in gene-splicing work that forever changed scientists' understanding of the DNA structure of cells, and helped spark the ongoing revolution in biotechnology. Phillip A. Sharp, 49, who turned down the MIT presidency three years ago to devote time to research, and Richard J. Roberts, 50, research director at New England Biolabs in Beverly, were informed by telephone calls from the Nobel committee in Stockholm at about 6:30 a.m. yesterday that they would share the $825,000 prize. Roberts was up and working on his computer at his home in Wenham. Sharp was asleep at home in Newton. "I had to have him repeat it," a beaming Sharp said at a news conference at MIT, where he is head of the Biology Department. He was cheered by students and colleagues as he raised a glass of champagne with his wife, Ann, and two of their three daughters. "Days don't get any better than this." Roberts, who did postdoctoral work at Harvard, and was at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York when he made his discovery, said he couldn't imagine who would be calling that early when the phone rang at 6:25. "This is every scientist's dream come true," he told reporters at the Beverly center, where he was joined by his wife, Jeanne.

45. Premio Nobel De Medicina - Wikipedia
Translate this page Ver enlace http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html. 1994 Alfred G. Gilman,Martin Rodbell 1993 Richard J. Roberts, phillip A. sharp 1992 Edmond H
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premio_Nobel/Medicina
Portada Cambios Recientes Edita esta página Historia Páginas especiales Preferencias de usuario Mi lista de seguimiento Cambio Recientes Subir una imagen Lista de imágenes Usuarios registrados Estadísticas del sitio Artículo aleatorio Artículos huérfanos Imágenes huérfanas Artículos populares Artículos más solicitados Artículos cortos Artículos largos Artículos nuevos Todas las páginas (alfabético) Direcciones IP bloqueadas Página de mantención Fuentes externas de libros Versión para imprimir Discusión
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Premio Nobel de Medicina
(Redirigido desde Premio Nobel/Medicina Ver enlace: http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html
Leland H. Hartwell R. Timothy Hunt Paul M. Nurse ... Harold E. Varmus Sir James W. Black Gertrude B. Elion George H. Hitchings Susumu Tonegawa ... Barbara McClintock for transposon work. Sune K. Bergström Bengt I. Samuelsson John R. Vane Roger W. Sperry ... Earl W. Sutherland, Jr. Sir Bernard Katz Ulf von Euler Julius Axelrod Max Delbrück ... Feodor Lynen Sir John Carew Eccles Alan Lloyd Hodgkin Andrew Fielding Huxley Francis Harry Compton Crick ... Georg von Békésy Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet Peter Brian Medawar Severo Ochoa Arthur Kornberg ... Dickinson W. Richards

46. Nobel Medicine Prize
The nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine dates from 1901. Year,Winner(s), Country. 1993, Richard Roberts phillip sharp, Great Britaiin USA.
http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/nobelmedicine.html
Nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine The Nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine dates from 1901. Year Winner(s) Country E. von Behring Germany Sir Ronald Ross Great Britain N. R. Finsen Denmark I. P. Pavlov Russia R. Koch Germany C. Colgi
S. R. y Cajal Italy
Spain C. I. A. Laveran France P. Ehrich
E. Metchnikoff Germany
Russia T. Kocher Switzerland A. Kossel Germany A. Gullstrand Sweden A. Carrel USA C. Richet France R. Barany Austria 1915 to 1918 No Award Made J. Bordet Belgium A. Krogh Denmark No Award Made Archibald V. Hill
G. Meyerhof Great Britain
Germany F. C. Banting
J. R. Macleod Canada
Canada W. E. Einthoven Netherlands No Award Made J. Fibiger Denmark J. Wagner-Jauregg Austria C. Nicolle France C. Eijkman
Sir Frederick G. Hopkins Netherlands
Great Britain K. Landsteiner Austria O. Warburg Germany Sir Charles S. Sherrington

47. MIT Biologist Is Awarded Nobel
series of research prizes regarded as forerunners to the nobel sort of The directorof the McGovern Institute, phillip sharp, has long admired the precision
http://www.geocities.com/costisifri/nobel_Horvitz.htm
MIT biologist is awarded Nobel Cell death findings spur medical quests By Stephen Smith, Globe Staff, 10/8/2002 An MIT biologist was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for using a tiny worm to unravel the secrets of how human cells die, a discovery that has revolutionized the field of biology and ignited research into treatments for cancer and diseases of the brain. H. Robert Horvitz, a student of mathematics and economics until the mysteries of biology seduced him, shared the prize with two British researchers, one of them his mentor, the other a longtime collaborator. Together, they pioneered the science of cell death, using parasitic worms called nematodes to understand why and how human cells commit suicide, a process integral to life. Already, drug company researchers are using this knowledge to develop treatments to prod cancer cells to self-destruct. And the Nobel laureates, along with other luminaries in biology, believe their breakthrough will one day produce ways of stopping the premature death of other cells, which could help the millions of patients stricken with Alzheimer's disease, Lou Gehrig's disease, and other neurodegenerative disorders. ''I would find nothing more gratifying than to learn that one or more of my discoveries led to pharmaceutical treatments or to human cures,'' Horvitz said, five hours after learning that he had received the most coveted award in medical research. ''That would be the dream.''

48. LFBM Visitors
phillip sharp. nobel Prize, Massachsetts Institute of Technology, USA. TamasSchneider Semmelweiss University, Budapest, Hungary. Günter Stalla, Dept.
http://lfbm.8m.com/visitors.htm
Free Web site hosting - Freeservers.com
VISITORS For experimental work In the group of Eduardo Arzt
  • Florian Kuchenbauer. Max-Planck Insitute Psychiatry Munich, Germany. August-October 1998. María Cecilia Rodriguez Galan. Dpt. Immunology, Univ. Nac. de Córdoba, Argentina. October 1998. Eliane Correa de Santana. Fundaçao Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. November-December 1998.
In the group of Norberto Iusem
  • Laura Pérez Flores, UNAM, Mexico DF, Mexico.
In the group of Alberto Kornblihtt
  • Caroline Piche, Quebec, Canada. August-December 1998.
In the group of Osvaldo Uchitel
  • Manel Santa Fe Martinez. Universidad de Rovira y Virgili. Reus, Spain. October-November 1998.
In the group of Omar Coso
  • Saskia Brachman. University of Berlin. Germany. March-April 1998.
For seminars and discussions
  • Gabriel Aisemberg. Lehman College, Bronx, NY, USA
  • Ruben Baler. Unit on Temporal Gene Expression, LCMR-NIMH-NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA
  • Francisco Baralle.

49. A Giant In The Field Of Modern Molecular Biology
sharp and Roberts earned the nobel prize for work that fundamentally changed placewas originally described by our guest speaker, Dr phillip sharp, and helped
http://www.mcgill.ca/releases/2000/may/sharp/

Prospective students
Student information Alumni and friends Faculty and staff ... May A giant in the field of modern molecular biology Cohenists unite Conference on colon cancer Spring convocations at McGill University Climate experts at McGill University ... December Contact Kate Williams, Director, University Relations Office
A giant in the field of modern molecular biology Nobel laureate gives public lecture at McGill on May 5. One of the founders of modern molecular biology: Philip A. Sharp. May 1, 2000 Described as a giant in the field of modern molecular biology, Dr Philip A. Sharp will speak at McGill on Friday, May 5, at 4 pm, in the Palmer Howard Amphitheatre of the McIntyre Medical Sciences Building (3655 Drummond, 6th floor). His talk, "Shaping the genome: RNA splicing and gene structure/RNA interference and gene repeats," is being held under the auspices of the prestigious Foundations of Medical Science lecture series. McGill Dean of Medicine Abraham Fuks points out that this lecture series, originally established by Rose Wiselberg, is intended "to demonstrate to the media, to our own students and to the general public the way in which basic biomedical research lays the foundation for the future of clinical medicine." Everyone is welcome to attend. Next:
Staff directory

Unit directory

Downtown campus

Macdonald campus
... May University Relations Office (URO)
Burnside Hall
, Room 110
805 Sherbrooke Street West
Montreal, Quebec

50. 20th Century Year By Year 1993
nobel Prizes. The prize was awarded jointly to ROBERTS, RICHARD J., Great Britain,New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA, USA, b. 1943; and sharp, phillip A., USA
http://www.multied.com/20th/1993.html
Major Event/ Sports Nobel Prizes Pulitzer Prizes ... Popular Book s / Popular Television Shows Popular Music/ Grammy Awards/ Tony Awards
Major Events of 1993
Sports
NBA: Chicago Bulls vs. Phoenix Suns Series: 4-2
NCAA Football: Florida State Record: 12-1-0
Heisman Trophy: Charlie Ward, florida state, QB points: 2,310
Stanley Cup: Montreal Canadiens vs. Los Angeles Kings Series: 4-1
Super Bowl XXVII: Dallas Cowboys vs. Buffalo Bills Score: 52-17
World Series: Toronto Blue Jays vs. Philadelphia Phillies Series: 4-2
Popular Music
1. "A Whole New World" ... Peabo Bryson & Regina Belle
2. "Informer" ... Snow
3. "Freak Me" ... Silk
4. "That's the Way Love Goes" ... Janet Jackson
5. "Weak" ... SWV
6. "Can't Help Falling in Love" ... UB40 7. "Dreamlover" ... Mariah Carey 8. "I'd Do Anything for Love" ... Meat Loaf

51. PESQUISA FAPESP - CIÊNCIA - GENÉTICA - Descobertas Em Ritmo
Translate this page exemplo. Daí o interesse de phillip sharp – nobel de 1993 – emparticipar do corpo de consultores do Genoma Câncer paulista.
http://www.fapesp.br/ciencia473.htm

52. NEWS From The University Of Calgary
Awards. The third scientist, Dr. phillip sharp, is a previous GairdnerAward winner, and a nobel Prize Laureate (1993). Sir John
http://www.fp.ucalgary.ca/unicomm/news/Oct_02/gairdner.htm
NEWS RELEASE INDEX NEWS CLIPS RESEARCH EXPERTS ONLINE ... EVENTS October 17, 2002 Media Invitation and Photo Opportunity
Three international genetics
scientists visit Calgary Three scientists recognized internationally for their contributions to genetics are visiting Calgary on Monday October 21 to meet the research community and give public talks. Two of the scientists, Dr. Michael Waterman and Sir John Sulston, are winners of the prestigious 2002 Gairdner Foundation’s International Awards. The third scientist, Dr. Phillip Sharp, is a previous Gairdner Award winner, and a Nobel Prize Laureate (1993). Sir John Sulston was recently named a 2002 Nobel Prize winner. Sir Sulston and Dr. Waterman will be available for media interviews: TIME:
10:00 – 12:00 am WHEN:
Monday, October 21 WHERE:
in Faculty of Medicine labs WHAT:
Brief intro by U of C researchers,
brief overview of scientific discoveries
WHO:
Sir John Sulston, Gairdner and Nobel Prize winner 2002
Dr. Michael Waterman, Gairdner winner 2002

53. Biotech Beginnings
and led by such special people, says Dr. phillip sharp, nobel Laureate and professorat Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Center for Cancer Research.
http://www.redherring.com/mag/issue77/mag-beginnings-77.html
MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_home_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_tech_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_vc_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_investor_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_archive_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_conferences_on.gif') Gainers Millennium Pharm Advanced Micro Devices Tpsa Telekom Polska
Decliners Silverline Technologies Orascom Telecom Holding Net One Systems Co
Biotech beginnings
From brewing beer to unraveling the structure of DNA mankind unrelentingly endeavors to understand life's blueprint.
By Lee Bruno
From April 2000 issue
Since 1750 B.C., when the ancient Sumerians used yeast cells to break down starch and sugars in order to make beer, humans have strived to unravel the genetic mystery locked within living cells. Scientists have manipulated living organisms to solve problems and improve our way of life. Several thousand years later, researchers are on the threshold of a new frontier: mapping the very essence of life, the human genome. There's no doubt that biotechnology is at a crossroads. The field has had a long and varied history, filled with accidental discoveries and hard-won scientific triumphs that have impacted the course of humankind. Throughout the recent history of science there have been significant milestones, like Gregor Mendel's pioneering work on plant genetics and James Watson and Francis Crick's deciphering of DNA, the structure of the genetic plasma of life.

54. Mt Time At MIT
visiting with 1993 nobel Prize recipient MIT Professor phillip sharp.
http://web.media.mit.edu/~reilly/sharp.html
visiting with 1993 Nobel Prize recipient
MIT Professor Phillip Sharp

55. CSHL Association Annual Fund 2001 - Nobel Prize History
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory alumnus phillip sharp shared the 1993 nobel Prizefor making the same discovery while at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
http://www.cshl.org/public/annual_fund2001_nobel.html
have worked at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and many more have participated in its meetings and courses. JAMES D. WATSON shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962 for the co-discovery of the structure of DNA. He served as the Laboratory's director for 25 years and continues as its president.
BARBARA McCLINTOCK'S
discovery of transposable elements, or "jumping genes," in maize (1983 Nobel Prize) revolutionized the way scientists regard genes - particularly after they found the same surprising phenomenon in animal and human chromosomes.
ALFRED HERSHEY
(1969 Nobel Prize) helped prove that DNA is the molecule of heredity in the famous "Waring blender experiment." MAX DELBRUCK and SALVADORE LURIA , who pioneered the summer Phage Course at the Laboratory, shared the 1969 Nobel prize with Hershey for their contributions to the study of genetics in bacteria.
RICHARD ROBERTS (1993 Nobel Prize) and his Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory colleagues discovered the phenomenon of split genes and RNA splicing. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory alumnus PHILLIP SHARP shared the 1993 Nobel Prize for making the same discovery while at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

56. CSHL Association Annual Fund 2000 - Nobel Prize History
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory alumnus phillip sharp shared the 1993 nobel Prizefor making the same discovery while at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
http://www.cshl.org/public/annual_fund2000_nobel.html
During this past century, seven Nobel Laureates have worked at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and many more have participated in its meetings and courses. James D. Watson shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962 for the co-dicovery of the structure of DNA. He served as the Laboratory's director for 25 years and continues as its president. Barbara McClintock's discovery of transposable elements, or "jumping genes," in maize (1983 Nobel Prize) revolutionized the way scientists regard genes - particularly after they found the same surprising phenomenon in animal and human chromosomes. Alfred Hershey (1969 Nobel Prize) helped prove that DNA is the molecule of heredity in the famous "Waring blender experiment." Max Delbruck and Salvador Luria , who pioneered the summer Phage Course at the Laboratory, shared the 1969 Nobel prize with Hershey for their contributions to the study of genetics in bacteria. Richard Roberts (1993 Nobel Prize) and his Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory colleagues discovered the phenomenon of split genes and RNA splicing. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory alumnus Phillip Sharp shared the 1993 Nobel Prize for making the same discovery while at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

57. RUDBECK SEMINARS AUTUMN 2001
Extra Rudbeck seminar 5/12 nobel Lectures (in connection with the nobel Prize CentennialCelebration) by James D Watson, phillip sharp and Richard Roberts.
http://www.genpat.uu.se/seminar/semscheman/Rudbecksem_ht01_final_.html
RUDBECK SEMINARS fall Tumor biology, genetics and molecular biology Rudbeck hall, Thursdays at 3 PM Extra Rudbeck seminar Friday Joop van Zoelen, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands 24/8 at 2 pm " Central role of the PDGF alpha-receptor in human neural tube defects" Phil Green , Washington University, Seattle, USA "Finding the molecular ’parts lists’ for multicellular organisms" No seminar Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Uppsala University "PDGF antagonists increase the effect of anti-cancer drugs on solid tumors by increasing tumor drug uptake" Host: Jan Dumanski Erik Sonnhammer, Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm "New methods for finding orthologs and paralogs" Evolutionary Biology Center, Uppsala University "Genetic studies of the domestication process. The case of the horse" Rikard Holmdahl, Medical Inflammation Research, Lund University "Dissection of complex genetics using animal models for RA and MS" Host: Sandra Kleinau Lundberg Laboratory, Gothenburg University

58. Jewish Nobel Prize Winners
phillip sharp; 1994 - Alfred Gilman; 1994- Martin Rodbell;
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Judaism/nobels.html
Jewish Nobel Prize Winners
The Nobel Prizes are awarded by the Nobel Foundation of Sweden to men and women who have rendered the greatest service to humankind. Between 1901 and 1995, 663 Nobel Prizes were handed out. Of these, 140 are Jews or people of Jewish descent.
Literature
World Peace
Chemistry
  • 1905 - Adolph Von Baeyer
  • 1906 - Henri Moissan
  • 1910 - Otto Wallach
  • 1915 - Richard Willstaetter
  • 1918 - Fritz Haber
  • 1943 - George Charles de Hevesy
  • 1961 - Melvin Calvin
  • 1962 - Max Ferdinand Perutz
  • 1972 - William Howard Stein
  • Ilya Prigogine
  • 1979 - Herbert Charles Brown
  • 1980 - Paul Berg
  • Walter Gilbert
  • 1981 - Roald Hoffmann
  • 1982 - Aaron Klug
  • 1985 - Albert A. Hauptman

59. Harapan's Bookshelf: Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine
Link Official Website of nobel Foundation Physiology or Medicine 1998, 1993. RICHARDJ. ROBERTS and phillip A. sharp for their independent discoveries of
http://www.harapan.co.jp/english/e_books/E_B_nobel_med_e.htm
Search Now: Search: English Books Japanese Books Both Keywords:
Japanese
Amazon.com customer service Amazon.com Shipping Information Are you in Japan? Are you interested in Japan? English Books in Japan Books in Japanese Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
last updated on Link: Official Website of Nobel Foundation: Physiology or Medicine Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro and Ferid Murad for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system STANLEY B. PRUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection PETER C. DOHERTY and ROLF M. ZINKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. EDWARD B. LEWIS CHRISTIANE NÜSSLEIN-VOLHARD and ERIC F. WIESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. ALFRED G. GILMAN and MARTIN RODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells. RICHARD J. ROBERTS

60. Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine - Wikipedia
Source http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html. Sakmann 1992 Edmond H.Fischer, Edwin G. Krebs 1993 Richard J. Roberts, phillip A. sharp 1994 Alfred
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Physiology_or_medicine
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