Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Hopkins Sir Frederick Gowland
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Hopkins Sir Frederick Gowland:     more books (19)
  1. Hopkins and Biochemistry: Papers Concerning Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, OM, PRS, with a Selection of his Addresses and a Bibliography of his Publications. by Joseph Needham, 1949-01-01
  2. Perspectives in Biochemistry. Thirty - One Essays Presented to Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins by Past and Present Members of His Laboratory. by Joseph; and Green, David E., eds. Needham, 1939
  3. HOPKINS & BIOCHEMISTRY, 1861-1947. Papers concerning Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, O.M., P.R.S., with a Selection of his Addresses & a Bibliography of his Publications. A Commemoration Volume Prepared on the Occasion of the First International Congress on Biochemistry, Cambridge, 1949. by Sir Frederick Gowland, Editor: Joseph Needham & Ernest Baldwin, Foreword: A.C. Chienall, Contributors: Malcolm Dixon, Leslie J. Harris, Marjory Stephenson. Hopkins, 1949
  4. Hopkins & Biochemistry, 1861-1947; Papers Concerning Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, O.M., P.R.S., With a Selection of His Addresses and a Bibliography by frederick hopkins, 1949
  5. Perspectives in Biochemistry: Thirty-One Essays Presented to Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins by Past and Present Members of His Laboratory. Second Impression. by Joseph [Ed] Needham, 1938
  6. Perspectives in Biochemistry, Thirty-one Essays presented to Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins By past and Present Members of His Laboratory by Joseph and David E. Green (editors) Needham, 1937
  7. Hopkins & biochemistry, 1861-1947;: Papers concerning Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, O.M., P.R.S., with a selection of his addresses and a bibliography of his publications, by Frederick Gowland Hopkins, 1949
  8. Perspectives in Biochemistry: Thirty-One Essays Presented to Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins by Past and Present Members of His Laboratory. Second Impression.
  9. Discovery and Significance of Vitamins. by Sir Frederick Gowland. BN| Hopkins, 1936
  10. PERSPECTIVES IN BIOCHEMISTRY by HOPKINS SIR FREDERICK GOWLAND, 1937-01-01
  11. Chemistry and life. The Fourth Gluckstein Memorial Lecture, 1932. by Sir Frederick Gowland (1861-1947). HOPKINS, 1933-01-01
  12. Monographs on biochemistry by Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, 2009-08-10
  13. Hopkins & biochemistry, 1861-1947; papers concerning Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, O.M., P.R.S., with a selection of his addresses and a bibliography of his publications, edited by Joseph Needham and Ernest Baldwin ... by Frederick Gowland, Sir (1861-1947) Hopkins, 1949-01-01
  14. The Diary of Robert Hooke M.A., M.D., F.R.S. 1672-1680... Edited by Henry W. Robinson and Walter Adams. With a Foreword by Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins.

61. SIMR - Centenary Survey Of Nobel Laureates
1929 Christiaan EIJKMAN and sir frederick gowland hopkins discover vitaminB1 and show actions of vitamins and results of any deficiencies.
http://www.simr.org.uk/pages/nobel/time_line_3.html
Home Biotechnology Celebrity support Benefits of animal research ... Links
Nobel Prize Winners in Physiology and Medicine (1920 - 1929)
Alfred Bernhard Nobel
Nobel Survey Index
Photo: Wellcome Institute Library The Timeline
"The medicines of tomorrow will depend upon research being done today, for which animal experimentation is essential. Ignore the need for that research and we shall lose the cures that we are entitled to expect in the next 50 years for illnesses that afflict hundreds of millions of people such as cancer, heart disease, viral diseases, malaria, schistosomiasis and sickle cell anaemia." - Sir John Vane, Nobel Prizewinner 1982 Schack August Steenberger KROGH - discovers the mechanism controlling the capillary blood vessels. Reserved 1921 Sir Archibald Vivian HILL and Otto Fritz MEYERHOF - discover the oxygen/lactic acid mechanism in working muscles. Sir Frederick Grant BANTING and John James Richard MACLEOD - discover insulin to treat sugar diabetes. (Photo: Wellcome Institute Library) Willem EINTHOVEN - invents the ElectroCardioGram which examines the electrical activity of the heart.

62. RTP
Translate this page Sherrington, Edgar Douglas Adrian 1931 - Otto Heinrich Warburg 1930 - Karl Landsteiner1929 - Christiaan Eijkman, sir frederick gowland hopkins 1928 - Charles
http://www.rtp.pt/index.php?article=18102&visual=5

63. Complete Health Care And Medical Information From India
Name sir frederick gowland hopkins. Discovery The growthstimulatingvitamins. sir frederick gowland hopkins. Date Of Birth 1861.
http://www.medivisionindia.com/nobelprize/1929.phtml
Home Doctor's Den 2B Docs Children ... Ask Medivision We subscribe to the HONcode principles
of the
Health On the Net Foundation
Site Updated on Saturday 05 June, 2004 Name : CHRISTIAAN EIJKMAN Discovery : The antineuritic vitamin
CHRISTIAAN EIJKMAN Date Of Birth : Place Of Birth : Nijkerk (The Netherlands) Residence: The Netherlands Affiliation: Utrecht University (Professor of Public Health and Forensic Medicine, 1898-1928)
Investigating the disease beriberi in Java, his observations of dietary deficiency led to the discovery of vitamins Name : SIR FREDERICK GOWLAND HOPKINS Discovery : The growth-stimulating vitamins
SIR FREDERICK GOWLAND HOPKINS Date Of Birth : Place Of Birth : Eastbourne, East Sussex (Great Britain) Residence: Great Britain Affiliation: Cambridge University (Professor from 1914) Pioneered the study of accessory food factors (now known as vitamins)
Home
Doctor's Den 2B Docs Children Teens Men Women Seniors Site Map Search About Us Feedback Contributors Advertisement Policy ... Webmaster

64. Computer Dictionary - S-38
landseer luytens sir edwin lutyens sir ernst boris chain sir francis drake sir francisgalton sir frederick ashton sir frederick gowland hopkins sir frederick
http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dict-e/s-38.html

65. Sir Hans Adolf Krebs (www.whonamedit.com)
Socialist Government after only a few months, and he was forced to emigrate to Englandin 1933, where he was invited by sir frederick gowland hopkins (18611947
http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/1541.html

Home

List categories

Eponyms A-Z

Biographies by country
...
Contact

Whonamedit.com does not give medical advice.
This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is meant as a general interest site only. No information found here must under any circumstances be used for medical purposes, diagnostically, therapeutically or otherwise. If you, or anybody close to you, is affected, or believe to be affected, by any condition mentioned here: see a doctor.
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs
German-born English biochemist, born August 25, 1900, Hildesheim; died November 22, 1981, Oxford.
Associated eponyms: Krebs' cycle A complicated series of reactions in the body involving the oxidative metabolism of pyruvic acid and liberation of energy. Krebs-Henseleit cycle Ornithine citrulline arginine urea cycle. Krebs-Henseleit solution A perfusion solution. Biography: Hans Adolf Krebs in 1953 received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for the discovery in living organisms of the series of chemical reactions known as the tricarboxylic acid cycle, or Krebs cycle. He shared the Prize with Fritz Albert Lipman, USA, who received the prize for his discovery of coenzyme A and its importance to the intermediate metabolism. Hans Adolf Krebs descended from Jewish-Silesian ancestry. He was the son of Georg Krebs, an ear, nose, and throat surgeon who had established a successful practice in Hildesheim. His mother was Alma Krebs, née Davidson. He was educated at the Gymnasium Andreanum in Hildesheim and between the years 1918 and 1923 studied medicine at the Universities of Göttingen, Freiburg im Breisgau, and Berlin. After one year at the Third Medical Clinic of the University of Berlin he took, in 1925, his M.D. degree at the University of Hamburg. He spent the following year as a staff member in the chemistry department at the Institute of Pathology at Berlin, where he was exposed to the latest developments in biochemical research.

66. JBC -- 277 (24): 13
sir frederick gowland hopkins (18611947) was born in East Sussex,Great Britain. He founded the Department of Biochemistry at the
http://www.jbc.org/cgi/content/full/277/24/e13

HOME
HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS QUICK SEARCH: [advanced] Author:
Keyword(s):
Year: Vol: Page:
Classic Articles:
Hopkins and Dixon 54 (3): 527

J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 24, 13-, June 14, 2002
PDF Version of this Article
Email this article to a friend Similar articles found in:
JBC Online

PubMed
PubMed Citation Alert me when:
new articles cite this article
Download to Citation Manager Classic Articles Hopkins and Dixon 54 (3): 527
CLASSICS On Glutathione. II. A Thermostable Oxidation-Reduction System (Hopkins, F. G., and Dixon, M. (1922) J. Biol. Chem
ARTICLE TOP ARTICLE REFERENCES Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins (1861-1947) was born in East Sussex, Great Britain. He founded the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Cambridge in 1914. In 1920, the estate of Sir William Dunn provided funds for the establishment of a School of Biochemistry, a Chair of Biochemistry, and a new building for the Department at Cambridge. The Sir William Dunn Institute of Biochemistry was opened in 1924, and Hopkins was the first Sir William Dunn Chair (subsequent occupants of the Dunn Chair at Cambridge were A. C. Chibnall, Sir Frank Young, Sir Hans Kornberg

67. Physiology
Christiaan Eijkman (1929). sir frederick gowland hopkins (1929),Karl Landsteiner (1930), Otto Heinrich Warburg (1931). sir Charles
http://physiology.by.ru/foto_nobel.html

"Íîðìàëüíàÿ ôèçèîëîãèÿ"

S.B.Nazarov.
e-mail

Albrecht Kossel (1910) Allvar Gullstrand (1911) Robert Barany (1914) Schack August Steenberg Krogh (1920) Archibald Vivian Hill (1922) Otto Fritz Meyerhof (1922) Frederick Grant Banting (1923) John James Richard Macleod (1923) Willem Einthoven (1924) Christiaan Eijkman (1929) Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins (1929) Karl Landsteiner (1930) Otto Heinrich Warburg (1931) Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (1932) Edgar Douglas Adrian (1932) Sir Henry Hallett Dale (1936) Otto Loewi (1936) Albert von Szent-Gyorgyi Nagyrapolt (1937) Corneille Jean Francois Heymans (1938) Henrik Carl Peter Dam (1943) Edward Adelbert Doisy (1943) Joseph Erlanger (1944) Herbert Spencer Gasser (1944) Bernardo Alberto Houssay (1947) Walter Rudolf Hess (1949) Edward Calvin Kendall (1950) Tadeus Reichstein (1950) Philip Showalter Hench (1950) Georg von Bekesy (1961) Sir John Carew Eccles (1963) Alan Lloyd Hodgkin (1963) Andrew Fielding Huxley (1963) Ragnar Granit (1967) Haldan Keffer Hartline (1967) George Wald (1967) Sir Bernard Katz (1970) Ulf von Euler (1970) Julius Axelrod (1970) Earl W. Sutherland, Jr. (1971)

68. Great Moments In Medicine | Making The Vital Connection
sir frederick gowland hopkins (18611947) headed Cambridge University’sfirst biochemistry department. A brilliant scientist, hopkins
http://www.hippocrates.com/archive/April2000/04departments/04greatmoments.html
Hippocrates
April 2000

Hippocrates Home ...
Current Issue

Hippocrates in full
Archive

Read full-text back issues
Search
Hippocrates
Find the information you need now
CME

Continuing Medical Education Classifieds Search for jobs and upcoming medical meetings About the New Hippocrates Learn about us News Room Articles and press releases Contact Hippocrates Site Map A list of all the pages here at Hippocrates.com Other MMS Publications The New England Journal of Medicine, Journal Watch, and more from the Massachusetts Medical Society Great Moments in Medicine Making the Vital Connection By Tonse N. K. Raju, MD The best known of what turned out to be the vitamin deficiency diseases was beriberi, a killer widespread in eastern Asia in the 1800s. Because it often struck in epidemics, researchers assumed beriberi was a contagious disease caused by a microorganism. Dr. Raju is a neonatologist and Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Illinois in Chicago. Home Subscribe Current Issue Archive ... MMS Publications

69. Die Aufklärung Des Vitamin D Rätsels
Translate this page Der englische Biologe sir frederick gowland hopkins entwickelte diese Vorstellungim Verlauf von Studien, die mit seiner Entdeckung der Aminosäure Tryptophan
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/germanbeyonddiscovery/VitaminD_4.html
JENSEITS VON ENTDECKUNGEN
VON SPRENGSTOFFEN ZUM GAS, DAS HEILT

DIE GESCHICHTE DER HEPATITIS B

POLYMERE UND MENSCHEN
...
Mehr als nur eine Methode der Kalziumregulation

"..eine Substanz verschieden
von Proteinen und Salzen..."
Eijkman und sein Nachfolger Gerrit Grijns benutzten später Wasser oder Äthanol, um den mysteriösen anti-neuritischen Faktor aus den Reisschalen zu extrahieren. "Eine Substanz unterschiedlich von Proteinen und Salzen befindet sich in den Polituren von Reis " schrieben die zwei Forscher 1906, "die für die Gesundheit unentbehrlich ist, und dessen Mangel ernährungsbedingte Polyneuritis verursacht". Bald nach der Jahrhundertwende kam ein weiterer Forscher zur Erkenntnis, daß gewisse "zusätzliche Nahrungsfaktoren" existierten. Der englische Biologe Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins entwickelte diese Vorstellung im Verlauf von Studien, die mit seiner Entdeckung der Aminosäure Tryptophan im Jahr 1901 begannen. Aufbauend auf von ihm entwickelten Techniken, begann Hopkins eine Folge von jetzt klassischen Experimenten, die demonstrierten, daß vollständige Nahrung (im Gegensatz zu gereinigten Formen von Proteinen, Fetten und Kohlenhydraten) bestimmte unbekannte Bestandteile enthielt, die für Gesundheit und Wachstum essentiell waren. Der Biochemiker Casimir Funk glaubte aufgrund eigener Studien, daß diese Faktoren Amine waren (Verbindungen, die aus Ammoniak hergeleitet sind) und schlug als Namen für die Faktoren "vitale (lebenswichtige) Amine" oder kurz "Vitamine" vor. Das "e" im englischen Namen wurde später abgelegt als Wissenschaftler erkannten, daß diese unterschiedlichen Nährstoffe andere chemische Eigenschaften und Funktionen haben und, daß viele überhaupt keine Amine enthielten. Hopkins und Christiaan Eijkman - in später Anerkennung seiner fruchtbaren Studien über Beriberi - teilten sich 1929 den Nobelpreis für Medizin für die Entdeckung essentieller Nährstoffe.

70. Para Aclarar El Enigma De La Vitamina D
Translate this page El biólogo inglés sir frederick gowland hopkins desarrolló este concepto duranteel curso del trabajo que empezó con su descubrimiento del aminoácido
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/spanishbeyonddiscovery/bio_008721-03.html
Página Principal
Agricultura

Ciencias de la tierra

Cuestiones medioambientales
...
Sanidad

Contenido Primera Página "...una sustancia diferente de las proteínas y las sales..." Para aclarar el enigma de la vitamina D
"...una sustancia diferente de las proteínas y las sales..."
Más adelante, Eijkman y su sucesor, Gerrit Grijns, utilizaron agua o etanol para extraer el misterioso factor antineurítico de las cáscaras del arroz. "En la cascarilla del arroz existe una sustancia diferente a las proteínas y las sales," escribieron los dos investigadores en 1906, "que es indispensable para la salud y cuya ausencia produce la polineuritis nutricional." , o tiamina, del salvado del arroz. Poco después del inicio del siguiente siglo, otro investigador también llegó a creer en la existencia de ciertos "factores alimenticios complementarios". El biólogo inglés Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins desarrolló este concepto durante el curso del trabajo que empezó con su descubrimiento del aminoácido triptófano en 1901. Basado en las técnicas desarrolladas durante su investigación, Hopkins pasó a realizar una serie de experimentos, ahora ya clásicos, que demostraron que los alimentos integrales (opuestamente a las formas refinadas de proteínas, grasas y carbohidratos), contienen ciertos componentes desconocidos, esenciales para la salud y el crecimiento.

71. Ninemsn Encarta - Encyclopedia Article Centre - Life Scientists
Robert William * Hollows, frederick Cossom * Holmes, Oliver Wendell (18091894)* Hooker, sir Joseph Dalton * hopkins, sir frederick gowland * Horney, Karen
http://au.encarta.msn.com/artcenter_0.8.7/Life_Scientists.html
ninemsn Home Hotmail Search Shopping ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Encyclopedia Article Centre from Encarta Encyclopedia Articles Geography History Performing Arts ... Exclusively for ninemsn Encarta Premium Subscribers Life Sciences Life Scientists A Addison, Thomas
Adrian, Edgar Douglas, 1st Baron Adrian of Cambridge

Agassiz, Alexander

Agassiz, (Jean) Louis Rodolphe
...
Axelrod, Julius

B Baer, Karl Ernst von
Banks, Sir Joseph

Banting, Sir Frederick Grant

Barnard, Christiaan Neethling
...
Burnet, Sir Frank Macfarlane

C Cannon, Walter Bradford Cardozo, William Warrick Carrel, Alexis Carson, Rachel Louise ... Cuvier, Georges L©opold Chr©tien Fr©d©ric Dagobert, Baron D Dam, (Carl Peter) Henrik Darwin, Charles Robert Darwin, Erasmus Davenport, Charles Benedict ... Dunlop, Sir Ernest Edward E Eccles, Sir John Carew Egas Moniz, Ant³nio Ehrlich, Paul Eijkman, Christiaan ... Eustachio, Bartolomeo F Fabre, Jean Henri Fabricius ab Aquapendente, Hieronymus Fallopius, Gabriel Farrer, William James ... Funk, Casimir G Galen Gall, Franz Joseph Galton, Sir Francis Galvani, Luigi ... Grew, Nehemiah H Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich

72. Medikuntzako Nobel Saria - Wikipedia
Translate this page Scott Sherrington, Edgar Douglas Adrian 1931 Otto Heinrich Warburg 1930 Karl Landsteiner1929 Christiaan Eijkman, sir frederick gowland hopkins 1928 Charles
http://eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medikuntzako_Nobel_saria
Medikuntzako Nobel saria
Wikipediatik, entziklopedia askea.
Paul Lauterbur eta Sir Peter Mansfield Sydney Brenner H. Robert Horvitz John E. Sulston ... Harold E. Varmus Sir James W. Black Gertrude B. Elion George H. Hitchings Susumu Tonegawa ... Barbara McClintock for transposon work. Sune K. Bergstr¶m Bengt I. Samuelsson John R. Vane Roger W. Sperry ... Earl W. Sutherland, Jr. Sir Bernard Katz Ulf von Euler Julius Axelrod Max Delbr¼ck ... Feodor Lynen Sir John Carew Eccles Alan Lloyd Hodgkin Andrew Fielding Huxley Francis Harry Compton Crick ... Georg von B©k©sy Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet Peter Brian Medawar Severo Ochoa Arthur Kornberg ... Gerty Theresa , n©e Radnitz Cori, Bernardo Alberto Houssay Hermann Joseph Muller Sir Alexander Fleming Ernst Boris Chain Sir Howard Walter Florey Joseph Erlanger Herbert Spencer Gasser Henrik Carl Peter Dam ... Edward Adelbert Doisy Hutsik Hutsik Hutsik Gerhard Domagk Corneille Jean Fran§ois Heymans Albert von Szent-Gy¶rgyi Nagyrapolt Sir Henry Hallett Dale Otto Loewi Hans Spemann George Hoyt Whipple ... Thomas Hunt Morgan Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Edgar Douglas Adrian Otto Heinrich Warburg Karl Landsteiner ... Christiaan Eijkman Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins Charles Jules Henri Nicolle Julius Wagner-Jauregg Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger Hutsik Willem Einthoven Frederick Grant Banting John James Richard Macleod Archibald Vivian Hill ... Otto Fritz Meyerhof Hutsik Schack August Steenberg Krogh Jules Bordet Hutsik Hutsik Hutsik Hutsik Robert B¡r¡ny Charles Robert Richet Alexis Carrel Allvar Gullstrand ... Emil Adolf von Behring
Ikusi ere: Nobel saria Esteka:

73. RDInfo - Research And Development Information Details Of The Award
Other Awards funded by Biochemical Society. sir frederick gowland HopkinsMemorial Lecture Details (Hits 890) Last updated 15 December 2003.
http://www.rdinfo.org.uk/Queries/ListGrantDetails.asp?GrantID=2540

74. RDInfo - Research And Development Information Details Of The Award
Other Awards funded by Biochemical Society. sir frederick gowland HopkinsMemorial Lecture Details (Hits 891) Last updated 15 December 2003.
http://www.rdinfo.org.uk/queries/ListGrantDetails.asp?GrantID=2540

75. Frederick
botanist. frederick W. Taylor (18561915) American inventor. sir frederickGowland hopkins (1861-1947) British biochemist. Co-winner
http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/f/frederick.html
For many more names, please Return to Edgar's Main Page. Frederick
Gender : Masculine
Language : English
Etymology
Frederick is the modern English of an Old Germanic name, Frithuric
History
Although the Anglo-Saxons had their own form of the name, Freodheric , it was rare. The Normans carried it with them when they invaded in 1066, but it died out soon after. Frederick , did, however, remain popular in Continental Europe, especially among the German princes. The name was reintroduced to England when the German royal family of Hanover gained the English throne in 1714.
Fredrik , the Swedish form, first appeared in the 14th century, but did not become common until the 18th.
Pronunciation : FRED-er-ick.
Diminutives Fred Freddie Freddy Rick Rickie Ricky
Czech Danish Fritz Finnish Rieti French (Middle) Ferry Frery Frisian Fedde Feck Fick Vick German Fritz Alternates Frederic Fredric Fredrick Czech Bedrich Bedrisek Danish Frederik Dutch Frerik Freek English (Old) Freodheric French Finnish Fredrik Frisian Freddercke German Friedrich Hawaiian Peleke Hungarian Fredek Frigyes Italian Federigo Latin Fredericus Polish Friderich Fryderyk Frydrych Frydryk Scandinavian Frederik Spanish Federico Swedish Fredrik Surnames Frisian Vick German Frick Polish Frick Famous Bearers Artists and Authors Friedrich Rudolf, Freiherr von Canitz

76. @P.Medicina: Nobel Premiados
1978. Werner Arber Daniel Nathans Hamilton O. Smith. 1929. Christiaan Eijkman sirFrederick gowland hopkins. 1979. Allan M. Cormack sir Godfrey N. Hounsfield. 1930.
http://www.iespana.es/apmedicina/Nobel/Nobel2/nobel2.html
Número de Archivos:
Mapa
Novedades
Tu opinión
Libro de Visitas
Foro
Lista de Correo
Buscar Becas
Buscar Farmacias
Buscadores Médicos Hora Internet
Última Actualización: Premiados con el Nobel de Fisiología o Medicina Emil Adolf von Behring Max Theiler Sir Ronald Ross Selman Abraham Waksman ... Philip Showalter Hench Webmaster

77. UBC Library - MARION
(1 title); hopkins biochemistry, 18611947; papers concerning sir frederick Gowlandhopkins, OM, PRS, with a selection of his addresses and a bibliography of
http://dra.library.ubc.ca/MARION/auth?fmt_limit=&lng_limit=&index=T&key=Hopkins

78. The Sanger Institute : Press Releases
Science; 2000 George W Beadle Medal; 2000 sir frederick gowland HopkinsMedal; 2001 Knight Bachelor in New Year s Honours list; 2001
http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Info/Press/2002/021007.shtml
Sanger Home Acedb YourGenome Ensembl ... Publications
Press Releases Latest Release May 28 May 27 Apr 01 ... Feb 04
Press Archive
Search
FTP Site Sitemap Printable version
Press Releases: 7th October 2002
Sir John Sulston awarded the 2002 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
Sir John Sulston, former Director of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute said: "It's tremendously exciting for me because once again it reinforces the power of fundamental research. Our work on C. elegans at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology emphasized the benefits of sharing large amounts of information. We took a global approach to discover the mechanisms that led to the development of the worm. "The same is true for genomics. When results are shared freely amongst the biological community, as has been done for the worm and the Human Genome Projects , specialist scientists can move much more rapidly towards their goals. This flow of information, which builds in strength as it circulates, benefits medicine. Remember, this only the start and we need dedicated people to translate the fundamental knowledge into real healthcare benefits. "This is founded in Sydney Brenner 's vision, in setting up the worm project an entirely new system for developmental biology. My contribution to this was learning to watch the cells dividing, and sometimes dying, under the microscope. We could actually see programmed cell death in action, so beautiful, so clear and so reproducible. These qualities meant we could predict the moment of death, and begin the search for mutants to understand how this happened.

79. Hopkins, Sir Anthony
hopkins, sir Anthony. hopkins, sir Anthony, 1937–, British actor, b. Port Talbot,Wales. Related content from HighBeam Research on sir Anthony hopkins.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0824150.html
in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Infoplease Tools

80. Sir Frederick Grant Banting Definition Of Sir Frederick Grant Banting. What Is S
sir frederick Grant Banting. Word Word. Some words with sir frederickGrant Banting in the definition
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Sir Frederick Grant Banting
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Sir Frederick Grant Banting
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun Sir Frederick Grant Banting - Canadian physiologist who discovered insulin with C. H. Best and who used it to treat diabetes(1891-1941) Banting F. G. Banting physiologist - a biologist specializing in physiology Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Some words with "Sir Frederick Grant Banting" in the definition: Ashton
banting

Bos banteng

F. G. Banting
...
William Herschel

Previous General Dictionary Browser Next Sir Edward William Elgar
Sir Edwin Landseer Luytens

Sir Edwin Lutyens
...
Sir Harold Walter Kroto

Full Dictionary Browser Sir Elton John (enc.)
Sir Ernst Boris Chain
Sir Ferdinando Gorges (enc.) Sir Francis Bacon Sir Francis Bacon (enc.) Sir Francis Chichester (enc.) Sir Francis Drake Sir Francis Drake (enc.) Sir Francis Galton Sir Francis Galton (enc.) Sir Francis Walsingham (enc.) Sir Frank Stenton (enc.) Sir Frank Williams (enc.) Sir Fred Hoyle Sir Fred Hoyle (enc.) Sir Frederic Bartlett (enc.) Sir Frederick Ashton Sir Frederick Augustus Abel (enc.)

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter