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         Varmus Harold E:     more detail
  1. Retroviruses
  2. Biography - Varmus, Harold E(liot) (1939-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  3. Parity in Financing Mental Health Services: Managed Care Effects on Cost, Access and Quality by Harold E. Varmus, 1998-06
  4. Directors of the National Institutes of Health: Harold E. Varmus, Elias Zerhouni, Ruth L. Kirschstein, Rolla Dyer, Jeremy M. Berg
  5. American Ashkenazi Jews: Jason Schwartzman, Harold E. Varmus, Tim Barsky
  6. Retroviruses Slide Set by John M. Coffin, Stephen H. Hughes, et all 1998-03-15

41. Nobel Prize Winners For 1981-1990
physiology/medicine, varmus, harold, US, study of cancercausing genes calledoncogenes, physics, Taylor, Richard E. Canada, discovery of atomic quarks,
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/1981_90.html
Year Category Article Country* Achievement Literary Area chemistry Fukui Kenichi Japan orbital symmetry interpretation of chemical reactions chemistry Hoffmann, Roald U.S. orbital symmetry interpretation of chemical reactions economics Tobin, James U.S. portfolio selection theory of investment literature Canetti, Elias Bulgaria novelist, essayist peace United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Office of the (founded 1951) physics Bloembergen, Nicolaas U.S. applications of lasers in spectroscopy physics Schawlow, Arthur Leonard U.S. applications of lasers in spectroscopy physics Sweden electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis physiology/medicine Hubel, David Hunter U.S. processing of visual information by the brain physiology/medicine Sperry, Roger Wolcott U.S. functions of the cerebral hemispheres physiology/medicine Wiesel, Torsten Nils Sweden processing of visual information by the brain chemistry Klug, Aaron U.K. determination of structure of biological substances economics Stigler, George J. U.S. economic effects of governmental regulation literature Colombia novelist, journalist, social critic

42. ClubCaminantes - Premios Nobel - Medicina, El Club De Los Caminantes
Translate this page PREMIOS nobel, MEDICINA. Por su descubrimiento del origen celular delos oncogenos retrovirales. varmus, harold E. (Estados Unidos).
http://caminantes.metropoliglobal.com/web/nobel/medicina4.htm

Inicio
Foros Chat Top 10 ... PREMIOS NOBEL
MEDICINA Blumberg, Baruch S. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento relativo a nuevos mecánismos para el origen y diseminación de enfermedades infecciosas. Gajdusek, Daniel C. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento relativo a nuevos mecánismos para el origen y diseminación de enfermedades infecciosas.
Guillemin, Roger (Estados Unidos) Por sus descubrimientos de la producción de hormonas peptidas en el cerebro. Schally, Andrew (Estados Unidos) Por sus descubrimientos de la producción de hormonas peptidas en el cerebro. Yalow, Rosalynn Sussman (Estados Unidos) Por el desarrollo de radioinmuno-ensayos de hormonas peptidas.
Arber, Werner (Suiza) Por el descubrimiento de enzimas de restricción y su aplicación a problemas de la genética molecular. Nathans, Daniel

43. Holidaylectures.org - Infectious Disease
Donald E. Ganem, MD. A second book, The Double Helix, nobel laureate James Watson'saccount Ganem asked harold varmus, then a professor of microbiology at UCSF
http://www.hhmi.org/lectures/1999/ganem.htm
Home Infectious Diseases Webcast Lectures Lecture Summaries Teacher Resources Teacher Guide Lecture FAQs BioInteractive Ask a Scientist Order Materials ... Technical Tips Lecture Archives: Genes and Gender Biological Clocks Cardiovascular Genetics Neurobiology ... HHMI Grants

Donald E. Ganem, M.D.
While other kids' parents were reading them tales of Peter Rabbit and Robinson Crusoe, Don Ganem's father read bedside stories to him from the Encyclopaedia Britannica . "I discovered the joy of knowing things at a fairly early age," says Ganem. "Especially things other people didn't know. So I developed an addiction to facts. And if you're brought up with a fact addiction, science is a natural choice for a career." Still, it wasn't always clear that Ganem was headed for a career in biomedical research. In eighth grade, for example, he got an F in algebra because "I was holding hands with a girl in class," he says. "I wasn't paying very much attention to y=mx+b." In high school biology, however, he learned that researchers were figuring out how specific molecules perform critical jobs inside cells, and slowly his interests began to veer in that direction. "To think you could understand life at that level was quite mesmerizing," he adds.

44. PhysicsWeb - Nobel Laureates Oppose War Against Iraq
Fortyone American nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with EricR Kandel, Har Gobind Khorana, Ferid Murad, George E Palade, harold E varmus.
http://physicsweb.org/article/news/7/1/14

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Previous News for January 2003 Next Nobel laureates oppose war against Iraq
29 January 2003 Forty-one American Nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with Iraq. The declaration was organised by Walter Kohn, a theoretical physicist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon. The signatories include 19 winners of the physics prize. The declaration reads: "The undersigned oppose a preventive war against Iraq without broad international support. Military operations against Iraq may indeed lead to a relatively swift victory in the short term. But war is characterized by surprise, human loss and unintended consequences. Even with a victory, we believe that the medical, economic, environmental, moral, spiritual, political and legal consequences of an American preventive attack on Iraq would undermine, not protect, US security and standing in the world." The signatories include Norman Ramsey, who worked on the Manhattan Project, and Charles Townes, a former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon. Townes was also chairman of a federal panel that studied nuclear warheads.

45. American Nobel Laureates Make A Stand For Peace
In addition to winning nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have received the NationalMedal of Science, the nations highest science honor harold E. varmus M.
http://www.arabia.com/newsfeed/article/english/0,14183,377167,00.html

46. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
nobel Prize in medicine incorrectly identified the institution at which two 1989nobel laureates are employed. J. Michael Bishop and harold E. varmus are at
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.

47. Premios Nobel De Fisiología Y Medicina
Translate this page AÑO, PREMIOS nobel OTORGADOS EN FISIOLOGÍA Y MEDICINA. 1901, Behring, EmilAdolph von (Alemania). 1989, Bishop, J. Michael (EEUU) varmus, harold E. (EEUU).
http://fcmjtrigo.sld.cu/nobel.htm
Premios Nobel de Fisiología y Medicina
Premio Nobel
: premios concedidos cada año a personas, entidades u organismos por sus aportaciones extraordinarias realizadas durante el año anterior en los campos de la Física, Química, Fisiología y Medicina, Literatura, Paz y Economía. Otorgados por primera vez el 10 de diciembre de 1901, los premios están financiados por los intereses devengados de un fondo en fideicomiso contemplado en el testamento del químico, inventor y filántropo sueco Alfred Bernhard Nobel. Además de una retribución en metálico, el ganador del Premio Nobel recibe también una medalla de oro y un diploma con su nombre y el campo en que ha logrado tal distinción. Los jueces pueden dividir cada premio entre dos o tres personas, aunque no está permitido repartirlo entre más de tres. Si se considerara que más de tres personas merecen el premio, se concedería de forma conjunta. El fondo está controlado por un comité de la Fundación Nobel, compuesto por seis miembros en cada mandato de dos años: cinco elegidos por los administradores de los organismos contemplados en el testamento, y el sexto nombrado por el Gobierno sueco. Los seis miembros serán ciudadanos suecos o noruegos. De acuerdo con la voluntad de Nobel, se han establecido institutos separados en Suecia y Noruega para favorecer los objetivos de la Fundación con el fin de potenciar cada uno de los cinco campos en los que se conceden los galardones. En 1968, para conmemorar su 300 aniversario, el Banco Nacional de Suecia creó el Premio de Ciencias Económicas Banco de Suecia en Memoria de Alfred Nobel, que sería otorgado por la Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias (conocida con anterioridad por el nombre de Academia Sueca de las Ciencias). La Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias concede también los premios de Física y Química.

48. EMBO - Promoting Molecular Biology In Europe.
1989. harold E. varmus (Associate Member). 1991. Erwin Neher. 1991. 2002. SydneyBrenner H. Robert Horvitz John E. Sulston. The nobel Prize in Chemistry.
http://www.embo.org/organisation/nobel.html
links: EMBO members back to EMBO start page
Sydney Brenner (EMBO Member), H. Robert Horvitz and John E. Sulston (EMBO Member) received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2002 "for their discoveries concerning genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death". (EMBO Member) received one half of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2002 "for his development of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for determining the three-dimensional structure of biological macromolecules in solution". Well done! Congratulations to all of them.
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Arthur Kornberg Peter Brian Medawar Francis Harry Compton Crick James Dewey Watson
(Associate Member) Francois Jacob Har Gobind Khorana
(Associate Member) Sir Bernard Katz Christian de Duve David Baltimore
(Associate Member) Renato Dulbecco Werner Arber Daniel Nathans
(Associate Member)
(deceased 1999) Niels K. Jerne

49. [P S JournalFall97] Commencement 1997
P S alumnus harold E. varmus, director of the National Institutes of Health, gavethe Dr. varmus, a 1966 graduate of P S, is the first nobel Laureate to
http://cpmcnet.columbia.edu/news/journal/archives/jour_v17n03_0016.html

50. Harold Varmus, M.D.
harold E. varmus, MD is the Director of the National Institutes of In 1989, Dr varmusand his UCSF colleague J. Michael Bishop, MD, shared a nobel Prize in
http://www.uchsc.edu/sm/mstp/aspen97/varmus.html
Harold Varmus, M.D. Over the past twenty years, approaches to cancer have been dramatically altered by the discoveries of numerous proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes genes that contribute to the multi-step process of carcinogenesis in animals and man when they undergo mutation. The Varmus laboratory uses genetic and biochemical methods to understand the normal and pathological roles of such genes and the mechanisms by which they influence cell behavior. Special emphasis is placed on techniques for altering the mouse genome (by creating transgenes and targeted mutations), on the production of mouse models for breast cancers and brain tumors, and on the study of certain classes of proteins implicated in oncogenesis. Current activities address the following issues. (1) The functions of protein tyrosine kinases. Members of three families of such kinases are under study: (a) Src, Hck, and other members of the Src family that have demonstrated functions in osteoclasts and fibroblasts from genetically altered mice. (b) Sky (Tyro 3), a recently discovered, receptor-type protein tyrosine kinase from the Axl family, that is abundant in normal brain and mouse mammary tumors. (c) Rlk, a newly discovered member of the Btk/Itk family, expressed exclusively in T cells. (2) Multi-step carcinogenesis. They have used MMTV-Wnt-1 transgenic mice to identify proto-oncogenes (members of the FGF family) and tumor suppressor genes (p53) that influence mammary tumorigenesis. They are attempting to understand the roles of apoptosis, cell cycle control, and telomerase activity in p53-deficient tumors. Unexpectedly, mice with a wild type p53 transgene have a developmental defect of the kidney called oligomeganephronia that results from excessive cell death during renal development. They are also developing a new multi-step tumor model in transgenic mice by recapitulating the lesions found in human glioblastoma.

51. The Lasker Foundation | Lasker Awards And The Nobel
Year of. Basic Award Winner, Lasker, nobel. George Wells Beadle, 1950, 1958. JohnR. Vane, 1977, 1982. harold E. varmus, 1982, 1989. Selman A. Waksman, 1948, 1952.
http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/n_vs_l.html
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Lasker Awards and the Nobel
The Lasker Medical Science Awards in basic research, clinical research, special achievement and public service, which have been bestowed since l945, provide a chronicle of the progress of biomedical research over the last half-century. The Lasker Foundation is proud that many of the amazing discoveries and achievements of Lasker Award winners are recognized, in addition, by the prestigious Nobel Prize. As of 2002, sixty-six Lasker winners have gone on to win the Nobel. The following statistics are of interest:
  • 47.5% of the Basic Lasker Winners go on to win the Nobel

52. Premio Nobel De Medicina 2000 - Diario De Yucatán
origen celular de los oncogenes retrovirales . harold E. varmus. 1988.
http://www.yucatan.com.mx/especiales/nobel2000/medicina.asp
Premios Nóbel 2000
El Premio Nóbel de Fisiología o Medicina
La Fisiología o Medicina es una de las cinco áreas de premiación mencionadas en el testamento de Alfred Nóbel. Este testamento está incompleto. El testamento menciona que este premio deberá de ser otorgado a la persona que "haya hecho el más importante descubrimiento en las áreas de fisiología o medicina". Él también designó al Instituto Karolinska de Estocolomo para otorgar este premio, y bajo la solicitud de que no haya consideración alguna a la nacionalidad de los participantes, sino que el más valioso lo reciba, sea o no Escandinavo"
Ganadores 1981 - 1999 Günter Blobel "por el descubrimiento que las proteínas tienen señales intrínsecas que gobiernan su transportación y localización en la célula"
Robert F. Furchgott
"por sus descubrimientos referentes al óxido nítrico como una molécula de señalización en el sistema cardiovascular"
Louis J. Ignarro

53. PREMIOS NOBEL RELACIONADOS CON LA GENÉTICA
Translate this page J. Michael Bishop harold E. varmus. Por sus descubrimientos sobre el origen celularde los oncogenes retrovirales. 1989, Sidney Altman Thomas R. Cech. nobel de
http://www.ucm.es/info/genetica/AVG/nobel/nobel.htm
Alfred Nobel La mayoría de los Premios Nobel que figuran en la siguiente lista son de Fisiología y Medicina, salvo algunos de Química y de la Paz que se indican de forma expresa en la tabla. Albrecht Kossel Por sus trabajos sobre las sustancias albuminoides, incluyendo las nucleínas, que han contribuido al conocimiento de la química de las células. Karl Landsteiner Por sus descubrimientos de los grupos sanguíneos de la especie humana. Thomas H. Morgan Por su descubrimiento sobre la función de los cromosomas como portadores de la herencia. Hermann J. Muller Por su descubrimiento de la inducción de mutaciones mediante radiación con rayos X. Linus Carl Pauling Por sus investigaciones sobre la naturaleza de los enlaces químicos y su aplicación en la elucidación de la estructura de las sustancias complejas. También recibió el Premio Nobel de la Paz en 1962 por su lucha contra el desarrollo de las armas nucleares. George W. Beadle Edward L. Tatum Por su descubrimiento de que los genes actúan regulando sucesos químicos definidos.

54. AldeaEducativa.com | Contenidos Y Consultas Educativas
Translate this page Premios nobel de 1989. Haavelmo, Trygve. Por su descubrimiento delorigen celular de los oncogenos retrovirales. varmus, harold E.
http://www.aldeaeducativa.com/aldea/Nobel1e.asp?Which=1989

55. DAYBREAK - Eight Years Ago -- The First UCSF Nobel
UCSF microbiologists J. Michael Bishop, MD, and harold E. varmus, MD, won the NobelPrize in Medicine in 1989 for their discovery that cancercausing genes
http://www.ucsf.edu/daybreak/1997/10/1006_nob5.htm
Visit UCSF Today at http://www.ucsf.edu/today/
Eight Years Ago The First UCSF Nobel This discovery first raised the possibility that humans carry the seeds of cancer in their own genetic dowry, in the form of proto-oncogenes that are essential to normal growth and development. But these genes can become cancer genes when they are damaged or go out of control. The research of Bishop and Varmus, now the director of the National Institutes of Health, implicated proto-oncogenes in diverse forms of human cancer. Proto-oncogenes may be a final common pathway to trigger the carcinogenic actions of chemicals, radiation, aging and even viruses. Background on their Nobel Prize-winning work 1st appeared 10/06/97 UCSF Daybreak Daybreak Archives Search
Last Updated May 22, 1998
Please direct all comments and questions to the Daybreak Editor.
Please contact the UC Web Developer for questions of a technical nature. New contact address: today@itsa.ucsf.edu

56. Nobel For Medicine: All Laureates
E. Murray, E. Donnall Thomas 1989 J. Michael Bishop, harold E. varmus 1988 Sir JuliusAxelrod 1969 Max Delbrück, Alfred D. Hershey, Salvador E. Luria 1968
http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/med-list.html
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IG Nobel 2002 The invention of :-) West Nile Virus Asteroid Impact? ... Book: Russell Read also: Nobel Prize Women in Science : Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries by Sharon Bertsch McGrayne THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR MEDICINE: ALL WINNERS 2001 Leland H. Hartwell, R. Timothy Hunt, Paul M. Nurse 2000 Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard, Eric R. Kandel 1999 Günter Blobel 1998 Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro, Ferid Murad 1997 Stanley B. Prusiner 1996 Peter C. Doherty, Rolf M. Zinkernagel 1995 Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric F. Wieschaus 1994 Alfred G. Gilman, Martin Rodbell 1993 Richard J. Roberts, Phillip A. Sharp 1992 Edmond H. Fischer, Edwin G. Krebs

57. Nobel Prizes
nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi. 1987Susumu Tonegawa. 1989 J. Michael Bishop, harold E. varmus.
http://150.217.100.14/didonline/anno-ii/microbiologia/2001-2002/Lezioni/nobel_pr
UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE DIPARTIMENTO DI SANITÀ PUBBLICA (Direttore: Prof. Nicola Comodo) Sezione di Microbiologia "Renzo Davoli" Accesso n°
Nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi
Cliccando sull’anno o sul nome si va al sito ufficiale, dove si trovano le foto, le biografie, le motivazioni, e altro. Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Robert Koch Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran ... Stanley B. Prusiner

58. Nature Publishing Group
away from the hottest seat in biomedical research, but nobel Laureate harold haroldVarmus. believes that the goals of the originallynamed 'E-Biomed' were
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nm/journal/v7/n1/full/nm0101_10

59. The Star Archive - Harold E. Varmus
Listing last updated on December 9th, 2002, AD harold E. varmus. (nobel med.laureate 1989). c/o Off Dir. Nlh Bldg. 1 Room 126 900 Rockville Bethesdaa, MD.
http://www.stararchive.com/starc2000/sl/36257.html
More Autographs Links Add Information Link to this Page Print Listing last updated on December 9th, 2002 AD:
Harold E. Varmus
nobel med. laureate 1989
c/o Off Dir. Nlh Bldg. 1
Room 126 900 Rockville
Bethesdaa, MD. 20892
USA
Link to this page!

This listing has been last updated on December 9th, 2002

60. Nobel Medicine Prize
The nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine dates from 1901. Year, Winner(s),Country. 1989, J. Michael Bishop harold E. varmus, USA 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

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