Thomas R. Cech - Autobiography thomas R. cech Autobiography. of my research group's discoveries, more thana dozen national and international awards preceded the nobel Prize for http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1989/cech-autobio.html
Extractions: The safe streets and good schools of Iowa City, Iowa provided the backdrop for the childhood years of my sister Barbara,my brother Richard and myself. My father, who loved physics as much as medicine, interjected a scientific approach and point of view into most every family discussion. I discovered science for myself in fourth grade, collecting rocks and minerals and worrying about how they were formed. By the time I was in junior high school, I would knock on Geology professors' doors at the University of Iowa , asking to see models of crystal structures and to discuss meteorites and fossils. In 1966 I entered Grinnell College , where I was to derive as much enjoyment studying Homer's Odyssey, Dante's Inferno, and Constitutional History as Chemistry. I met Carol over the melting point apparatus in a make-up Organic Chemistry lab, starting the partnership of our lives that is now more than 20 years old.
Thomas R. Cech - Nobel Lecture thomas R. cech nobel Lecture. Selfsplicing Other Resources. thomasR. cech Autobiography nobel Lecture Other Resources. 1988, 1990. http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1989/cech-lecture.html
Index Of Nobel Laureates In Chemistry ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY. Name, Year Awarded. Alder,Kurt, 1950. Calvin, Melvin, 1961. cech, thomas R. 1989. Corey, Elias James, 1990. http://almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/alpha.html
Extractions: Thomas R. Cech The Trustees of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute have selected Thomas R. Cech of the University of Colorado at Boulder to become the next president of the Institute. Cech, who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1989, will assume the presidency next January. He will succeed Purnell W. Choppin, president of the Institute since 1987, who announced late last year that he would retire at the end of 1999. "The Trustees are delighted that Tom Cech has agreed to bring his creative leadership to the guidance of the Hughes Institute," said Hanna H. Gray, chairman of the HHMI Trustees and head of the committee that conducted the presidential search. "Professor Cech is a distinguished scientist of great accomplishment, with a profound understanding of the research world. As a Hughes investigator for more than 10 years, he knows the Institute extremely well and is in a unique position to lead it during this period of accelerating discovery in the biological sciences and in medicine. "In addition, he is a wonderful teacher who has repeatedly carved out time to teach undergraduates at the University of Colorado. He will bring the same thoughtful dedication to the Hughes Institute’s grants program, which focuses upon science education," she said.
Cech, Thomas Robert cech, thomas Robert. (b. Dec. 8, 1947, Chicago, Ill., US), American biochemist andmolecular biologist who, with Sidney Altman, was awarded the 1989 nobel Prize http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/111_54.html
Extractions: (b. Dec. 8, 1947, Chicago, Ill., U.S.), American biochemist and molecular biologist who, with Sidney Altman , was awarded the 1989 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their discoveries concerning RNA (ribonucleic acid). Cech attended Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa (B.A., 1970), and the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D., 1975, in chemistry). After serving as a National Cancer Institute fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1975-77), he joined the Department of Chemistry at the University of Colorado in 1978, becoming a full professor in 1983. Concurrently he was an investigator for the National Institutes of Health from 1978 and for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1988. Cech and Altman received a Nobel Prize for their independent discoveries that RNA, traditionally considered to be only a passive messenger of genetic information, can also take on an enzymatic role in which it catalyzes, or facilitates, intracellular chemical reactions essential to life. Before their discoveries, enzymatic activity had been attributed exclusively to proteins. Cech was the first person to show that an RNA molecule could catalyze a chemical reaction, and he published his findings in 1982. Altman, whose earlier research had pointed strongly to such a conclusion, conclusively demonstrated such enzymatic activity by an RNA molecule in 1983.
Encyclopædia Britannica Altman, Sidney CanadianAmerican molecular biologist who, with thomas R. cech, receivedthe 1989 nobel Prize for Chemistry for their discoveries concerning RNA http://www.britannica.com/search?query=sidney altman&seo
Cech, Thomas R. ,cech thomas R. (1947 Because of my research group's discoveries, more than a dozennational and international awards preceded the nobel Prize for Chemistry in http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/C/Cech/Cech.htm
Extractions: Cech Thomas R. Grandfather Josef, a shoemaker, immigrated to the U.S. from Bohemia in 1913. My other grandparents, also of Czech origin, were first-generation Americans. My father was and is a physician, my mother the homemaker. I was born in Chicago on December 8, 1947. The safe streets and good schools of Iowa City, Iowa provided the backdrop for the childhood years of my sister Barbara,my brother Richard and myself. My father, who loved physics as much as medicine, interjected a scientific approach and point of view into most every family discussion. I discovered science for myself in fourth grade, collecting rocks and minerals and worrying about how they were formed. By the time I was in junior high school, I would knock on Geology professors' doors at the University of Iowa, asking to see models of crystal structures and to discuss meteorites and fossils. In 1966 I entered Grinnell College, where I was to derive as much enjoyment studying Homer's Odyssey
Nobel Laureates In Chemistry By Alphabetical Order Themes Science Chemistry About Chemistry Generalities nobel Laureates inChemistry by Alphabetical order. Name, Calvin, Melvin, 1961. cech, thomas R. 1989. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Chemistry/Aboutchemistry/AlphaNobel
Extractions: Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August Aston, Francis William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Barton, Sir Derek H. R. Berg, Paul Bergius, Friedrich Bosch, Carl Boyer, Paul D. Brown, Herbert C. Buchner, Eduard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann Calvin, Melvin Cech, Thomas R. Corey, Elias James Cornforth, Sir John Warcup Cram, Donald J. Crutzen, Paul Curie, Marie Curl, Robert F., Jr. Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus De Hevesy, George Deisenhofer, Johann Diels, Otto Paul Hermann Eigen, Manfred Ernst, Richard R. Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Simon Von Fischer, Ernst Otto Fischer, Hans Fischer, Hermann Emil Flory, Paul J. Fukui, Kenichi Giauque, William Francis Gilbert, Walter Grignard, Victor Haber, Fritz Hahn, Otto Harden, Sir Arthur Hassel, Odd Hauptman, Herbert A. Haworth, Sir Walter Norman Heeger, Alan J. Herschbach, Dudley R. Herzberg, Gerhard Heyrovsky, Jaroslav Hinshelwood, Sir Cyril Norman Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't
Nature Publishing Group thomas R. cech. Always ready with examples to back up his words, cech mentions Susumu atthe Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who won the nobel Prize for http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nm/journal/v7/n2/full/nm0201_14
Nobel Prize Winning Chemists nobel Prize Winning Chemists. 1988 1990 thomas R. cech. The nobel PrizeIn Chemistry 1989. thomas R. cech was born in Chicago on December 8, 1947. http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/t
Extractions: Nobel Prize Winning Chemists Thomas R. Cech The Nobel Prize In Chemistry 1989 In Berkeley, 1970, his thesis advisor, John Hearst, had an enthusiasm for chromosome structure and function that proved infectious. In 1975 they obtained their Ph. D.'s and moved to postdoctoral positions in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Among his awards were the Pfizer Award in Enzyme Chemistry, the Award in Molecular Biology, the Heineken Prize and the Lasker Award. He was awarded the Nobel Prize jointly with Sidney Altman "for their discovery of catalytic properties of RNA." More recently, his life has been transformed by the addition to his family of two energetic daughters, Allison (born 1982) and Jennifer (1986). Because of his research group's discoveries, more than a dozen national and international awards preceded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1989. Back To Main Page
Thomas R. Cech Heineken Prize, 1988; nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1989; National Medal RNA was longthought to function solely as a the work carried out by Professor cech and his http://www.colorado.edu/chemistry/faculty/Cech/
Extractions: R NA was long thought to function solely as a genetic messenger, as a component of the ribosome, and as a carrier of amino acids. Now, largely because of research done at the University of Colorado, it is just as common to think of RNA participating actively in cellular metabolism. RNA can engage in intramolecular catalysis, including self-splicing, and in some cases can act as an enzyme. A major goal of the work carried out by Professor Cech and his research group is to understand mechanisms of RNA catalysis at both the chemical and the biological levels. The work integrates organic and physical chemistry, enzymology, molecular biology, structural biology, and genetics. Current efforts focus on the structural biology of large catalytic RNAs, or ribozymes. Crystallographers in the Cech laboratory have grown x-ray diffraction-quality crystals of an active group I ribozyme (247 nt) and solved its structure at modest resolution (5 angstroms). Current work is directed toward obtaining atomic-resolution structures of active group I introns.
Thomas Cech Wins Nobel Prize While At MIT For BUSA Lecture Shortly before thomas R. cech was to give yesterday's lecture for the Biology UndergraduateStudent Association, the nobel committee in Stockholm announced http://www-tech.mit.edu/V109/N42/cech.42n.html
Extractions: By Annabelle Boyd Shortly before Thomas R. Cech was to give yesterday's lecture for the Biology Undergraduate Student Association, the Nobel committee in Stockholm announced that he had won this year's Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Cech will share the prize with Yale Professor Sidney Altman '60. Cech, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, worked at MIT as a post-doctoral fellow under Professor Mary Lou Pardue before moving to his post in Colorado. Cech was alone when he received the phone call from the Nobel committee at 9 am yesterday morning in his hotel room. He is the winner of several major awards, including the prestigious Lasker Award for medical research, which he shared with MIT professor Phillip A. Sharp last year. To acknowledge the prize, Cech held a 25 minute press conference at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research yesterday that started at noon. When asked by a reporter if the Nobel Prize would change his life, Cech replied, "I hope not." Another reporter asked if Cech had expected to win the prize. Cech answered, "I'd be home in Colorado if I knew I was going to get the call." Because of the announcement
Chemical & Engineering News: SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY - THOMAS R. CECH A few minutes after the scheduled hour, thomas R. cech comes Although cech isn'treferring to his own and biomedical researcherincluding a nobel Prize in http://pubs.acs.org/cen/coverstory/7827/7827scit1.html
Extractions: [Photo by Paul Fetters] A few minutes after the scheduled hour, Thomas R. Cech comes quickly out of his well-appointed office in the handsome complex of buildings in Chevy Chase, Md., that is the headquarters of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) . Gracious and informal, Cech nevertheless gives the impression of a busy man. No doubt he is. Since last January, when he became president of HHMI, the 52-year-old chemist has been jetting back and forth roughly every other week between this post and the University of Colorado , Boulder, where he continues to head his world-renowned biochemistry laboratory.
Remarks By Thomas R. Cech Biology's Revolution Opportunities and Challenges for Universities thomas R. CechPresident, Howard of talking about the work that led to the nobel Prize, I http://www.aau.edu/aau/Cech10.00.html
Extractions: President, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Good morning. It is a special pleasure to be back in Chicago, the city where I was born, and at the University of Chicago, where I have enjoyed many fine events through the years and have many colleagues. In fact, two former students from my laboratory became tenured faculty members here at the university. It is also a thrill for me to be able to talk about the future of education and research at universities with the people who are guiding these great institutions in the twenty-first century. We are already into this century, of course, but we still have ninety-nine years to make good on whatever we decide to do. Our invitation requested that we each talk about the past, present, and future of our own research disciplines. I was asked to speak before I had become president of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, so I planned to give you a view "from the trenches," drawing on my twentythree years of carrying out research, teaching general chemistry and biochemistry to undergraduates, and teaching graduate students at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Now, having taken on the Howard Hughes position, I feel inclined also to address some higher-level issues. So this is going to be a discussion of what biological research is like and how it is changing, mixed in with a look at some of the ways that institutions might respond to new challenges.
MIT Nobel Prize Winners news release, October 12, 2001; Theses of MIT Alumni nobel Prize Winners Sidney Altman,Chemistry, MIT SB 1960, shared with thomas R. cech, MIT postdoctoral http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/nobels.html
Extractions: Fifty-six current or former members of the MIT community have won the Nobel Prize . They include 22 professors, 23 alumni (including three of the professors), 13 researchers and one staff physician. Twenty-five of the Nobel Prizes are in physics, ten in chemistry, eleven in economics, eight in medicine/physiology, and two in peace. Eight Nobel prizes were won by researchers who helped develop radar at the MIT Radiation Laboratory. Nobelists who are current members of the MIT community are Drs. Horvitz (2002), Ketterle (2001), Molina (1995), Sharp (1993), Friedman (1990), Tonegawa (1987), Solow (1987), Modigliani (1985), Ting (1976) Samuelson (1970), and Khorana (1968). - MIT news release, October 7, 2002 Eight from MIT win 2001 Nobels i n 5 fields - MIT news release, October 12, 2001 Theses of MIT Alumni Nobel Prize Winners - MIT Libraries
Awards And Honors: Nobel Prize 3 cech, thomas R. shared Chemistry, 1989; thomas, E. Donnall - shared Medicine/Physiology,1990; Wilkinson, Geoffrey (deceased) - shared Chemistry, 1973. nobel http://web.mit.edu/ir/pop/awards/nobel.shtml
Extractions: Institutional Research Awards and Honors American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Association for the Advancement of Science CAREER Award John Bates Clark Medal Crafoord Prize Dirac Medal Franklin Institute Awards Fulbright Scholars Program Gairdner Award Gregori Aminoff Prize Guggenheim Fellows HHMI Investigators Institute of Medicine Japan Prize Kyoto Prize Lemelson-MIT Awards MacArthur Fellows NAE NAS National Book Award National Medal of Science National Medal of Technology Nobel Prize Pulitzer Prize Alan T. Waterman Award -Student Honors- Fulbright Fellows Marshall Scholars Rhodes Scholars -MIT Only- Levitan Prize Nobel Prize Nobel Foundation Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Current faculty: 7 Friedman, Jerome I. - shared Physics, 1990 Horvitz, H. Robert - shared Medicine/Physiology, 2002 Ketterle, Wolfgang - shared Physics, 2001 Molina, Mario J. - shared Chemistry, 1995 Sharp, Phillip A. - shared Medicine/Physiology, 1993
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY. Name, Year Awarded. Alder,Kurt, 1950. Calvin, Melvin, 1961. cech, thomas R. 1989. Corey, Elias James, 1990. http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelc.htm
Extractions: ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August ... Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Zinkernagel, Rolf M. Source: The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Thomas Cech Dr. thomas R. cech of the University of Colorado received the nobel Prize for Chemistryin 1989 for his research in establishing a link between RNA and the http://www.cualum.org/heritage/virtual_tour/cech.html
Extractions: University of Colorado, Boulder Dr. Thomas R. Cech of the University of Colorado received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1989 for his research in establishing a link between RNA and the evolutionary chain. His discoveries have shed new light on the mystery of the beginning of life and guided genetic engineers in their search for life-saving cures in the battle against cancer. Prior to Cech's RNA breakthroughs in the early 1980s, scientists believed DNA served as the warehouse of genetic information, that RNA decoded the information and that proteins used the information to create physical attributes such as skin, hair and eyes. These proteins were thought to be the only catalysts in determining cell development. Cech's research established that RNA, like a protein, can act as a catalyst in cellular processes.
Biographies: Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Chemistry History of Science History of Chemistry Winners of the nobel Prize in Calvin,Melvin; cech, thomas R. Corey, Elias James; Cornforth, John Warcup; Cram, Donald http://www.infochembio.ethz.ch/links/en/history_chem_nobel_bio.html