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         Rodbell Martin:     more detail
  1. Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research, Part A: Abstracts Volume by Robert S. Adelstein, Claude B. Klee, 1988-06
  2. The Role of Adenyl Cylase and Cycling 3'.5'-Amp in Biological Systems by Theodore W., Martin Rodbell, Peter Conliffe Rall, 1969
  3. Advances in Second Messenger and Phosphoprotein Research/Sixth International Conference/Formerly Advances in Cyclic Nucleotide and Protine Phosphoryl by Robert S. Aldenstein, Claude B. Klee, 1988-06

41. Referaty.sk • Všetko, èo študent Potrebuje
Elena Maróthy Šoltésová životopis 859. Dean martin biography 860. EdwardB. Lewis a martin rodbell životopis 861. Karol Marx životopis 862.
http://www.referaty.sk/index.php?vypis=15&oby=&od=750

42. Martin Rodbell : Discovering How Cells Respond To Signals
Back to whats new page. martin rodbell discovering how cells respondto signals, martin rodbell Discovering How Cells Respond
http://bioresearch.ac.uk/whatsnew/detail/20074577.html
low graphics
Back
to whats new page. Martin Rodbell : discovering how cells respond to signals Martin Rodbell: Discovering How Cells Respond to Signals is a Web exhibit based on existing physical exhibits in the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center. Sections covering the exhibit include: the Nobel Prize and hormones; the first step-isolating single cells; Rodbell's inspiration - Sutherland's second messenger; a new model for message transmission; a far-ranging impact; and the 1994 Nobel Prize. One in a series of exhibits that seeks "to educate the public on the process of 20th-century biomedical research and achievements" produced and made available on the Web by the DeWitt Stetten, Jr., Museum of the Office of the NIH History. Cell Communication / history Hormones / history Research Exhibitions [Publication Type]
Last modified: 09 Sep 2003

43. Martin Rodbell : Discovering How Cells Respond To Signals
martin rodbell discovering how cells respond to signals. martin rodbellDiscovering How Cells Respond to Signals is a Web exhibit
http://bioresearch.ac.uk/cgi/fullRecord.cgi?key=20074577&gateway=bioresearch

44. American National Biography Online
rodbell, martin (1 Dec. 19257 Dec. rodbell, martin ; http//www.anb.org/articles/13/13-02659.html;American National Biography Online January 2003 Update.
http://www.anb.org/articles/13/13-02659-article.html
Rodbell, Martin (1 Dec. 1925-7 Dec. 1999) , Nobel Prize-winning cell biologist, was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Milton Rodbell, a grocer, and Shirley Abrams Rodbell. Although his parents never attended college, they stressed the importance of education to their son. Rodbell's initial impulses toward science did not come from school but rather from two of his childhood friends. His father did not allow him to have a chemistry set in the basement, which served as the grocery storeroom, so instead the boys used his friend's basement to "try to blow up things and watch mixtures change colors." The three boys attended Baltimore City College, a highly selective all-boys public high school. The school was patterned after European preparatory schools, which placed a strong emphasis on the liberal arts and offered only a few science courses. Rodbell entered Johns Hopkins University in the fall of 1943. He was torn between his high school love of languages, especially French, and his grade school love of science. His initial studies at Johns Hopkins, however, were interrupted by World War II. In 1944 Rodbell joined the U.S. Navy and served as a radio operator. Despite his desire as a Jew to fight Adolf Hitler, he spent the majority of his time stationed in the South Pacific. He contracted malaria in the Philippines, then served for the remainder of the war as a radio operator in the Pacific fleet. In 1946 Rodbell resumed his studies at Johns Hopkins and was attracted to French literature and philosophy. His father, however, wanted him to become a doctor, so he took premed courses. Although put off by the competitive premed atmosphere, he was inspired by the enthusiasm of Bentley Glass, a biology professor. Glass encouraged Rodbell to take chemistry to make up for his deficiency in the subject, and consequently Rodbell stayed an extra year and graduated with a B.A. in 1949.

45. The `G Man
The `G Man. Fate, Fortitude and Frustration Were Part of the Path to a Nobel Prizefor Alumnus of the Year martin rodbell. Nobel Laureate martin rodbell, 54.
http://www.washington.edu/alumni/columns/june96/rodbell1.html
The `G' Man
Fate, Fortitude and Frustration Were Part of the Path to a Nobel Prize for Alumnus of the Year Martin Rodbell.
by Tom Griffin Nobel Laureate Martin Rodbell, '54. Photo (c)1996 Dan Sears. It's the little things in life that can turn out to make big differences. Take the case of Martin Rodbell. His encounters with a friend's chemistry set, an algebra teacher's extra assignments, a father's resistance to French literature, a Ph.D. project at the UW gone wrongand perhaps he never would have won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1994. "I think of this more and more as I get older," says the 70-year-old Nobel laureate, who received his doctorate from the UW biochemistry department in 1954 and now lives in Chapel Hill, N.C. "A person's experiencesthe total life experiencesare really important to carrying something through to its logical conclusion." The logical conclusion to Rodbell's experiences came in a phone call from Sweden at 6 a.m. in the morning on Oct. 10, 1994. The voice told him he was sharing the Nobel Prize with Alfred Gilman of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas , for work they had both done on how cells communicate through G proteins In recognition of his outstanding work in the world of science, the University of Washington and the UW Alumni Association have named Rodbell the 1996 Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus, the highest honor the UW can bestow upon any graduate.

46. Welcome To The Martin Rodbell Exhibit!
For Section 508 Handicap Accessibility, please visit our Text Only site.US Department of Health Human Services National Institutes of Health.
http://history.nih.gov/exhibits/rodbell/
National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health

47. Martin Rodbell, 1925-1998
Without doubt, the thread of one s life should be within the matrix of the totalhuman experience. martin rodbell, LePrix de Nobel, 1994 martin rodbell.
http://history.nih.gov/exhibits/rodbell/text/7_1_farewell.htm
Home A Baltimore native and the son of a grocer, Martin Rodbell was born December 1, 1925. He attended Baltimore City College, a public high school, and then Johns Hopkins University. World War II interrupted his studies there; he served as a Navy radioman with the Pacific fleet. After the war, Rodbell returned to Johns Hopkins, and switched to science, from French literature, as a vocation. At the University of Washington, in Seattle he received his Ph.D. in biochemistry, and then came to the National Institutes of Health as a research biochemist in Nobel laureate Christian Anfinsen's laboratory at the National Heart Institute, now called the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. "In many respects my career and experiences with people and events have been seamless in that I cannot separate one from another. Without doubt, the thread of one's life should be within the matrix of the total human experience."

48. Caramba! - Nobelova Cena - Medicína
II. 1994. Gilman, Alfred GI; Gilman, Alfred G. II. rodbell, martinI. rodbell, martin II. 1995. Lewis, Edward BI; Lewis, Edward B. II.
http://www.caramba.cz/page.php?PgID=696

49. Premios Nobel De Medicina
de las señales celulares , Gilman, Alfred G.; rodbell, martin.
http://www.biologia.edu.ar/basicos/nobeles/nobelmed.htm
Premios Nobel de Medicina
PRINCIPAL ÍNDICE Notas [ Nobel Medicina ] Nobel Química Tema Ganador Behring, Emil Adolf Von Ross, Sir Ronald Finsen, Niels Ryberg Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Koch, Robert Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y.; Golgi, Camillo Laveran, Charles Louis Alphonse Ehrlich, Paul; Metchnikoff, Ilya Ilyich Kocher, Emil Theodor Kossel, Albrecht Gullstrand, Allvar Carrel, Alexis Richet, Charles Robert Barany, Robert Bordet, Jules Krogh, Schack August Steenberger Hill, Sir Archibald Vivian; Meyerhof, Otto Fritz; Banting, Sir Frederick Grant; Macleod, John James Richard; Einthoven, Willem; Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib Wagner-Jauregg, Julius Nicolle, Charles Jules Henri Eijkman, Christiaan; Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland Landsteiner, Karl Warburg, Otto Heinrich Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas; Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Morgan, Thomas Hunt Minot, George Richards; Murphy, William Parry; Whipple, George Hoyt Spemann, Hans Dale, Sir Henry Hallett; Loewi, Otto Nagyrapolt, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Von Heymans, Corneille Jean Francois Domagk, Gerhard

50. Premios Nobel · Libros · Cultura Y Ciencia · Terra
Translate this page martin rodbell. Fecha de nacimiento 1925 País de Nacimiento Estados Unidos Paísde Concesión Estados Unidos. Biografía Nació en Baltimore (Maryland).
http://cultura.terra.es/cac/libros/nobel/portada.cfm?idpersona=702&idpremio=293

51. VOLNÝ - Vyhledavání
Sharp, Phillip A. II. 1994. Gilman, Alfred GI. Gilman, Alfred G. II. rodbell, martinI. rodbell, martin II. 1995. Lewis, Edward BI. Lewis, Edward B. II. (cesky).
http://web.volny.cz/najdito/search.php?sessionId=GXN2QfBPm6N6NgPJV4U7qw5ZMLDogEl

52. MSN Encarta - Rodbell, Martin
Translate this page rodbell, martin. rodbell, martin (Baltimora 1925 – Chapel Hill 1998), biochimicostatunitense. Web Center. Trova altre informazioni su rodbell, martin,
http://it.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761582685/Rodbell_Martin.html
MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Iscriviti a Encarta Premium Cerca in Encarta
Articolo riservato agli iscritti MSN Encarta Premium: Puoi consultare questo e altri 30.000 articoli, un atlante interattivo, un dizionario bilingue e altre risorse, effettuando l'iscrizione a MSN Encarta Premium per €29,95 all'anno. Per saperne di pi¹. L'articolo ¨ disponibile solo per gli utenti iscritti a MSN Encarta Premium. Gi  iscritto? Per accedere fare clic sul pulsante Accedi in alto a destra. Rodbell, Martin Rodbell, Martin (Baltimora 1925 – Chapel Hill 1998), biochimico statunitense. Nel 1954 Rodbell consegu¬ il Ph.D. presso l'Universit  di Washington; dal... Vuoi altri contenuti di Encarta? Iscriviti subito e avrai a tua disposizione:
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53. Environ Health Perspect 107-1, 1999: Martin Rodbell Obituary
martin rodbell, Nobel Prize winner, martin rodbell, Nobel Prize winner, Nobel Prizerecipient, Environ Health Perspect 1071, 1999 martin rodbell Obituary
http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1999/107-1/rodbell.html

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January 1999

In Memoriam
In Memoriam: Martin Rodbell, Nobel Prize winner
Martin Rodbell, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1994, passed away 7 December 1998 after a long illness. Rodbell had a long and distinguished career in research and senior leadership positions at the National Institutes of Health. At different times in his career, he conducted research at the National Heart Institute, the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases (NIAMD), and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). He served as Scientific Director of the NIEHS from 1985 to 1989. In 1994 he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Alfred Gilman, Professor and Chairman in the Department of Pharmacology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, for their work on G-proteins, a key component of the communication system that regulates cellular activity. Rodbell was the fifth NIH intramural scientist to be awarded a Nobel Prize. Martin Rodbell was born on 1 December 1925 in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended public schools in Baltimore and graduated from an accelerated course at Baltimore City College, a highly selective public high school. Martin Rodbell matriculated at the Johns Hopkins University in 1943 but was soon drafted into the U.S. Navy. He served with the Navy in the South Pacific, the Philippines, Korea, and China before returning to the Johns Hopkins University and earning his Bachelor of Arts degree in biology in 1949. Martin received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Washington at Seattle in 1954 for research performed in the laboratory of Don Hanahan. Rodbell received postdoctoral training at the University of Illinois under Herbert Carter in the Department of Chemistry.

54. Nobel Prize Recipient At NIEHS
Dr. martin rodbell of NIEHS Nobel Prize Winner. Click picture for full size rodbelland Olden Dr. martin rodbell and Dr. Kenneth Olden, Director of NIEHS.
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/external/nobel.htm
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Dr. Martin Rodbell of NIEHS - Nobel Prize Winner Nobel Prize-winner Martin Rodbell, 73, who discovered a key secret of the communications system that regulates the human body’s cellular activities, died December 7th, 1998 at University of North Carolina Hospitals in Chapel Hill, where he was being treated for cardiovascular problems. Please click on one of the selections below: In Memory of Dr. Martin Rodbell Obituary Autobiography The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1994
Press Release NIH News:
Dr. Martin Rodbell of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and Dr. Alfred G. Gilman of University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas were awarded the 1994 Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine. Dr. Rodbell is a scientist emeritus in the Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology at NIEHS and Dr. Alfred G. Gilman, an NIH grantee, is professor and chairman in the department of pharmacology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Their work focuses on G proteins, a key component of the communication system that regulates cellular activity. Click picture for full size
Dr. Martin Rodbell

55. DICCIONARIO DE TERMINOLOGIA MEDICA
rodbell, martin (925-1998), Estados Unidos.
http://www.iqb.es/diccio/n/nobel10.htm
Premios Nobel
NEHER, Erwin (n 1944) Alemania; SAKMAN, Bert (n.1942) Alemania FISCHER Edmond H (n. 1920), Estados Unidos; KREBS, Edwin G (n.1920), Estados Unidos ROBERTS, Richard, J (n. 1943) Estados Unidos; SHARP, Phillip A (n. 1944) Estados Unidos GILMAN, Alfred G. (n. 1941), Estados Unidos; RODBELL, Martin (925-1998), Estados Unidos LEWIS, Edward B. (n. 1918) Estados Unidos ; NUSSLEIN-VOLLHARD, Christiane (n. 1942) Alemania; WIESCHAUS, Eric F (n. 1947), Estados Unidos DOHERTY, Peter C (n. 1940), Australia; ZINKERNAGEL, Rolf M (n. 1944) Suiza PRUSINER, Stanley (n. 1942) Estados Unidos por el descubrimiento de los priones como agentes infectantes FURCHGOTT, Robert F. (n. 1916) Estados Unidos; IGNARRO, Louis J (n.1941) Estados Unidos; MURAD, Ferid (n. 1936) Estados Unidos por sus descubrimientos sobre el NO como factor relajante del endotelio BLOBER, Gunther

56. 20th Century Year By Year1961
Medical Center, Dallas, TX, b. 1941, and rodbell, martin, USA, National Instituteof Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC, b. 1925, d. 1998
http://www.multied.com/20th/1961.html
Major Event/ Sports Nobel Prizes Pulitz er Prizes ... Popular Book s / Popular Television Shows Popular Music/ Tony Awards Grammy Awards
Major Events of 1961
Sports
NBA: Boston Celtics vs. St. Louis Hawks Series: 4-1
Heisman Trophy: Ernie Davis, syracuse, HB points: 824
Stanley Cup: Chicago Blackhawks vs. Detroit Red Wings Series: 4-2
US Open Golf: Gene Littler Score: 281 Course: Oakland Hills CC Location: Birmingham, MI
World Series: New York Yankees vs. Cincinnati Reds Series: 4-1
Popular Songs
1. "Wonderland by Night" ... Bert Kaemfert
2. "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" ... The Shirelles
3. "Calcutta" ... Lawrence Welk
4. "Pony Time" ... Chubby Checker
5. "Surrender" ... Elvis Presley
6. "Blue Moon" ... The Marcles
7. "Runaway" ... Del Shannon 8. "Mother-in-Law" ... Ernie K-Doe 9. "Travelin' Man" ... Ricky Nelson

57. Physiology Or Medicine 1994 - Press Release
the Karolinska Institute has today decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physiologyor Medicine for 1994 jointly to Alfred G. Gilman and martin rodbell for their
http://www.geocities.com/fordhamendocrinology/nobel1994.htm
Press Release: The 1994 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
NOBELFÖRSAMLINGEN KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
THE NOBEL ASSEMBLY AT THE KAROLINSKA INSTITUTE
10 October 1994
The Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute
has today decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1994 jointly to
Alfred G. Gilman and Martin Rodbell
for their discovery of "G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells".
Summary
It has been known for some time that cells communicate with each other by means of hormones and other signal substances, which are released from glands, nerves and other tissues. It is only recently that we have begun to understand how the cell handles this information from the outside and converts it into relevant action - i.e. how signals are transduced in cells.
The discoveries of the G-proteins by the Americans Alfred G. Gilman

58. Martin
American astronomer. Sir martin Ryle (19181984 ) British radio astronomer.martin rodbell (1925-1998 ) American biochemist. Winner of
http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/m/martin.html
For many more names, please Return to Edgar's Main Page. Martin
Gender : Masculine
Language : English, French
Etymology
Martin is the English form of Martinus , a variant of Martius
History
Martin , being the name of St. Martin of Tours (a popular medieval saint) was common all over Europe and can be found in northern France from the 9th century onwards.
The Normans popularized the name in England, and it was quite common from the 12th century until the Reformation rather dampened the appeal of saint names. It never became really unpopular in Protestant countries, however, probably because it was Martin Luther who began the Reformation. It has never gone out of fashion.
Pronunciation : marr-tin.
Diminutives
English Marty Alternates Breton Marzhin Catalan Danish Morten Mort Dutch Marten Maarten Martijn Finnish Martti German (Low) Marten Hawaiian Malakina Hungarian Marton Irish Gaelic Martan Italian Martino Latin Martinus Norwegian Morton Polish Martyn Marcin Portuguese Martinho Scottish Gaelic Spanish Swedish Swiss Marti Surnames Dutch Martense Feminine Martina Martine Famous Bearers Artists and Authors Martin Schongauer German painter.

59. Índice Alfabético De Los Premios Nobel De Fisiología O Medicina (1901-1998)
Dickinson Woodruff (1956) RICHET, Charles Robert (1913) ROBBINS, Frederick Chapman(1954) ROBERTS, Richard J. (1993) rodbell, martin (1994) ROSS, Ronald (1902
http://www.bvs.sld.cu/revistas/his/vol_2_99/his12299.htm
Indice Anterior Siguiente Formato .PDF
ADRIAN, Edgar Douglas (1932)
ARBER, Werner (1978)
AXELROD, Julius (1970)
BALTIMORE, David (1975)
BANTING, Frederick Grant (1923)
BEADLE, Georges Wells (1958)
BEHRING, Emil Adolf von (1901)
BENACERRAF, Baruj (1980)
BISHOP, Michael John (1989)
BLACK, James Whyte (1988)
BLOCH, Konrad Emil (1964) BLUMBERG, Baruch Samuel (1976) BORDET, Jules Jean Baptiste Vicent (1919) BOVET, Daniel (1957) BROWN, Michael Stuart (1985) BURNET, Frank Macfarlane (1960) CARREL, Alexis (1912) CHAIN, Ernest Boris (1945) CLAUDE, Albert (1974) COHEN, Stanley (1986) CORI, Carl Ferdinand (1947) CORI, Gerty Theresa Radnitz (1947) CORMACK, Allan MacLeod (1979) CRICK, Francis Harry Compton (1962) DALE, Henry Hallet (1936) DAM, Henrik Carl Peter (1943) DAUSSET, Jean (1980) DOHERTY, Peter C. (1996) DOISY, Edward Adelbert (1943) DOMAGK, Gerhard (1939) DULBECCO, Renato (1975) ECCLES, John Carew (1963) EDELMAN, Gerald Maurice (1972) EHRLICH, Paul (1908) EIJKMAN, Christiaan (1929) EINTHOVEN, Willem (1924) ELION, Gertrude Belle (1988) ENDERS, John Franklin (1954)

60. MSN Encarta - Martin Rodbell
Translate this page Ya eres suscriptor? Inicia una sesión arriba. martin rodbell. martin rodbell (1925-), bioquímico estadounidense. Más información sobre martin rodbell de,
http://es.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_201500162/Martin_Rodbell.html
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Art­culo de suscripci³n MSN Encarta Premium: Consigue este art­culo junto con 41.000 art­culos m¡s, un atlas din¡mico, diccionarios y mucho m¡s por s³lo 29,95 euros/a±o. M¡s informaci³n. Este art­culo s³lo est¡ disponible para los suscriptores de MSN Encarta Premium. ¿Ya eres suscriptor? Inicia una sesi³n arriba. Martin Rodbell Martin Rodbell (1925- ), bioqu­mico estadounidense. Por sus contribuciones al modo en que las c©lulas se comunican entre s­, comparti³ el Premio Nobel... ¿Quieres m¡s de Encarta? Suscr­bete hoy y tendr¡s acceso a:
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