MSN Encarta - Search Results - Mullis Kary B Encarta Search results for mullis kary b . Page 1 of 1. Found in the Genetics article. 5. Magazine and news articles about mullis kary b *. http://encarta.msn.com/Mullis_Kary_B.html
Extractions: MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Encarta Search results for "Mullis Kary B" Page of 1 Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers Mullis, Kary B. ArticleâEncarta Encyclopedia Mullis, Kary B. (1944-Â ), American biochemist and Nobel Prize winner. Mullis revolutionized the fields of biology and medicine with his method for... related items invention of PCR picture of Kary Mullis Nobel Prize, Chemistry Chart or TableâEncarta Encyclopedia Found in the Nobel Prize Winners table Kary Mullis PictureâEncarta Encyclopedia Picture from Encarta Encyclopedia Genetics: Kary Mullis ArticleâEncarta Encyclopedia Found in the Genetics article Magazine and news articles about Mullis Kary B
WIEM: Mullis Kary B. mullis kary b. (1945), biochemik kanadyjski. Chemia, Biologia, Kanada mullis kary b. (1945-). mullis kary b. (1945-), biochemik kanadyjski. http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/0069d0.html
Extractions: Mullis Kary B. (1945-), biochemik kanadyjski. Pracuj±c dla firmy Cetus Corporation w Kalifornii, w 1985 wynalaz³ enzymatyczn± metodê ( enzym ), zwan± ³añcuchow± reakcj± polimerazy ( PCR ), pozwalaj±c± analizowaæ wybrane fragmenty kodu genetycznego DNA ( kwasy nukleinowe ), a tak¿e szybko je namna¿aæ (powielaæ). Etapy PCR - schemat Namna¿anie fragmentów DNA Mullis opatentowa³ swój pomys³, a jego metoda PCR zrewolucjonizowa³a wspó³czesn± biologiê, za co otrzyma³ w 1993 Nagrodê Nobla w dziedzinie chemii (wraz z M. Smithem WIEM zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry
ThinkQuest : Library : Conceiving A Clone Kary B. Mullis. Mullis is currently doing HIV and AIDS research. Technique Polymerase Chain Reaction. Web Link Photo Kary B. Mullis Biography Kary B. Mullis. http://library.thinkquest.org/24355/data/details/profiles/mullis.html
Extractions: Index Life Science Genetics Trace cloning technology from its beginnings to today's exciting biotechnology developments. Learn about techniques for "conceiving a clone." But not everyone agrees on the answers to the ethical and moral questions raised by this biological tinkering. Should humans be cloned? Join the discussion and let your views be known! Discover what countries around the world are doing to regulate cloning experimentation. Languages: English. Visit Site 1998 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Awards Second Place Languages English Students Kayvon Round Rock High School, Round Rock, TX, United States Brandon Round Rock High School, Round Rock, TX, United States Bennett Round Rock High School, Round Rock, TX, United States Coaches Edwin Round Rock High School Library, Round Rock, TX, United States Mark San Francisco, CA, United States Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site.
Kary B. Mullis - Autobiography kary B. mullis Autobiography. My father Cecil Banks mullis and mother, formerly Bernice Alberta Barker grew up in rural North http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1993/mullis-autobio.html
Extractions: My grandfather milked several cows twice a day and supplied the neighbours with dairy products. He liked to go visiting around the county on Saturdays and he also enjoyed the neighbours when they came by once a week with their empty milk jars. He walked them out to their cars and hung over the driver's side window until they drove off. The road was two tire tracks on well mown grass between barbed wire fences, cows off to the right, alfalfa or sometimes corn to the left. I remember mostly the summers. My mother and aunts presided out on the big screened back porch shelling peas, stringing beans, peeling apples, pears, and peaches. The peaches were peeled with a special machine that had a hand crank and left a spiraling groove on what was left of the peach. The peels went to the pigs. Everything else went into steaming Mason jars which would go down into the earthen floored cellar. Down there in the dark, and it was always a little moist, were spiders in abundance and magnificent biodiversity. My brothers, and my cousins, and I ventured into the cellar once in a while to inspect the sweet potatoes and the hibernating jars. No one wanted to stay there alone ever, and mostly we played in the woods, the swamp, the orchards, the barn, the granary, which had wasps, and the woodshed, which also had wasps and, like the barn, allegedly, snakes.
Chemistry 1993 kary B. mullis, Michael Smith. 1/2 of the prize, 1/2 of the prize. USA, Canada. La Jolla, CA, USA, University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada. http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1993/
Extractions: "for contributions to the developments of methods within DNA-based chemistry" "for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method" "for his fundamental contributions to the establishment of oligonucleotide-based, site-directed mutagenesis and its development for protein studies" Kary B. Mullis Michael Smith 1/2 of the prize 1/2 of the prize USA Canada
Mullis, Kary B. mullis, kary B., kary B. mullis, 1994. Copyright Gary W. Meek/Black Star. in full kary BANKS mullis (b. Dec. 28, 1944, Lenoir, N.C. http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/409_50.html
Extractions: Kary B. Mullis, 1994 in full KARY BANKS MULLIS (b. Dec. 28, 1944, Lenoir, N.C., U.S.), American biochemist, cowinner (with Michael Smith ) of the 1993 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a simple technique that allows a specific stretch of DNA to be copied billions of times in a few hours. After receiving a doctorate in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1973, Mullis held research posts at various universities. In 1979 he joined Cetus Corp., a California biotechnology firm, where he carried out his prizewinning research. From 1986 to 1988 he was director of molecular biology for Xytronyx, Inc., in San Diego, Calif.; thereafter he worked as a freelance consultant. PCR has extremely wide applications. In medical diagnostics the technique made it possible to identify the causative agent of a bacterial or viral infection directly from a very small sample of genetic material; it was also used to screen patients for genetic disorders such as sickle cell anemia and Huntington's chorea. Evolutionary biologists employed PCR to study minute amounts of DNA extracted from the fossil remains of ancient species, and forensic scientists used it to identify crime suspects or victims from traces of blood, semen, or strands of hair left at a crime scene. The technique was also an important tool in gene sequencing. BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Kary B. Mullis (born December 28, 1944) kary B. mullis (born December 28, 1944) and surfer from Newport Beach, California, named kary mullis. mullis, considered an "intellectual maverick" by many, won http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/BC/Kary_B_Mullis.html
Extractions: Once in a while in the world of science, there comes an idea or a tool so ingenious that it revolutionizes the way people ask questions. Polymerase chain reaction , better known as PCR, is one of these technologies. It has not only made a tremendous impact on the scientific community, but it has also affected many aspects of our everyday lives. Polymerase chain reaction is a technique that amplifies DNA, enabling scientists to make millions - or even billions - of copies of a DNA molecule in a very short time. PCR has been used to detect DNA sequences, to diagnose genetic diseases, to carry out DNA fingerprinting , to detect bacteria or viruses (particularly the AIDS virus), and to research human evolution. It has even been used to clone the DNA of an Egyptian mummy! Who is the genius behind this revolutionary technology? He is a scientist and surfer from Newport Beach, California, named Kary Mullis. Mullis, considered an "intellectual maverick" by many, won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1993 for developing PCR. A native of South Carolina, he received a bachelor's degree in Chemistry from Georgia Tech and a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from U.C. Berkeley. His Ph.D. thesis was entitled, "Schizokinen: Structure and Synthetic Work," in which he described a molecule involved in bacterial iron transport. While a doctoral candidate, he published and article entitled "The Cosmological Significance of Time Reversal" ( Nature 218 :663(1968)) which deals with his notion that about half of the mass in the universe is going backward in time.
Extractions: The polymerase chain reaction, which was devised by Kary Mullis, has revolutionized DNA technology. PCR amplifies specific DNA sequences from very small amounts of complex genetic material. The amplification produces an almost unlimited number of highly purified DNA molecules suitable for analysis or manipulation. PCR has allowed screening for genetic and infectious diseases. Analysis of DNAs from different populations, including DNA from extinct species, has allowed the reconstruction of phylogenetic trees including primates and humans. PCR is essential to forensics and paternity testing. Mullis was born in Lenoir, N. Carolina and grew up in Columbia, S. Carolina. He received a B.S. from Georgia Tech and a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley. While working for Cetus Corporation, he invented PCR, which immediately spread to laboratories around the world where DNA chemistry was performed. PCR technology has grown into a several billion dollar a year industry. For his work, Mullis received the Japan Prize and the Nobel Prize for chemistry, both in 1993.
Dr. Kary B. Mullis kary B. mullis. American biochemist Dr. kary B. mullis ( 1944 ) won the 1993 Nobel Prize for chemistry for ancient or fossil tissues. mullis shared the Nobel Prize with British-born http://www.myhealthspan.com/mullis.shtm
Extractions: Preventive Medicine: Your Key to a Long and Healthy Life Home Page Newsletters FAQs H-SCAN Physical Age Test ... Our Results American biochemist Dr. Kary B. Mullis (1944- ) won the 1993 Nobel Prize for chemistry for revolutionizing the fields of biology and medicine with his method for producing abundant fragments of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). His Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) enables scientists to create sequences of genetic material in quantities that are large enough to study. PCR has played a major role in the International Human Genome Project which has major health and antiaging implications . The technique has also become invaluable in disease diagnosis, forensic-science analysis in convicting the guilty and freeing the falsely accused, and the study of DNA from ancient or fossil tissues. Mullis shared the Nobel Prize with British-born Canadian biochemist Michael Smith, who was honored for devising a technique to control the formation of proteins. In 1998 Mullis was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in the United States.
Kary B. Mullis Winner Of The 1993 Nobel Prize In Chemistry kary B. mullis, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. kary B. mullis. 1993 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry kary B. mullis bio. mullis claims HIV not the cause http://www.almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/1993a.html
Extractions: Health and Science Inventions and Discoveries The National Inventors Hall of Fame Mullis, Kary Banks Born: Birthplace: North Carolina Mullis invented PCR, the process for amplifying nucleic acids, in 1993 while at Cetus Corporation. PCR has revolutionized the fields of microbiology, medical diagnostics, and forensics. PCR allows scientists to identify a fragment of DNA genetic code and then reproduce it infinitely. It is used to discover faulty genes in hereditary diseases and diagnose viral and bacterial infections, including HIV. Police can get decisive information from a single drop of blood or a hair. Other uses include determining genetic ties and evolutionary connections between animal species including extinct animals whose remains are fossilized. It was used to identify the remains of Russia's last czar, Nicolas II. (1998)
Kary B. Mullis -- Encyclopædia Britannica mullis, kary B. Encyclopædia Britannica Article. kary B. mullis. born Dec. 28, 1944, Lenoir, NC, US kary B. mullis, 1994. kary B. mullis, 1994. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=55595&tocid=0&query=polymerase chain rea
HIV & AIDS - Kary Mullis Rethinking AIDS A growing group of scientists claim HIV the AIDS virus - is harmless, AIDS is not contagious, and medication is dangerous. INDEX. kary mullis. kary mullis Ph.D. is a Biochemist http://www.virusmyth.com/aids/index/kmullis.htm
Kary B. Mullis (1945 - ) kary B. mullis (1945 ). 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. BS.in Chemistry, Georgia Tech; Ph.D. in Biochemistry, University of California-Berkeley. http://www.cofc.edu/~deavorj/102/notes/people/kbmullis.html
Extractions: Ph.D. in Biochemistry, University of California-Berkeley. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for contributions to the development of methods within DNA-based chemistry , with to Dr. Kary B. Mullis , La Jolla, California, U.S.A., for his invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, and to Professor Michael Smith , University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, for his fundamental contributions to the establishment of oligonucleotide-based, site-directed mutagenesis and its development for protein studies. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) according to a number of scientists has been the biggest advance in molecular biology in a decade. It is a technique that amplifies DNA, enabling scientists to make millions of copies of a DNA molecule in a very short time. PCR has been used to detect DNA sequences, to diagnose genetic diseases, to carry out DNA fingerprinting, to detect bacteria or viruses (particularly the AIDS virus), and to research human evolution. Kary Mullis, a scientist and a surfer from La Jolla, California, considered an "intellectual maverick" by many, won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1993 for developing PCR. A native of South Carolina, he received a bachelor's degree in Chemistry from Georgia Tech and a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from U.C. Berkeley. His Ph.D. thesis was entitled
MSN Encarta - Mullis, Kary B. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. mullis, kary B. mullis, kary B. (1944 ), American biochemist and Nobel Prize winner. Find more about mullis, kary B. from, http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761582668/Mullis_Kary_B.html
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Kary B. Mullis / Chemistry Genius. Hippie. Womanizer. Brilliant. Outlaw. Out to lunch. Honest. Fearless. Hothead. Acidhead. Worldchanging. Thus have colleagues, friends and detractors described kary B. mullis, a stereotype-busting scientist awarded the 1993 PCR. mullis, who turns 57 this month, also is known as http://www.latimes.com/la-120201mullis.htmlstory
Extractions: The technique, known as the polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, is the basis of DNA-identifying tools that almost immediately advanced many fields, including biology, forensics, medicine and paleontology. How did archeologists determine the age of a 2,500-year-old Egyptian mummy? PCR. How have lawyers and other advocates freed scores of men wrongly imprisoned for murder, rape and other crimes since the mid-1980s? PCR treatment of crime-scene blood, semen, hair or skin, which showed that the perpetrators' and prisoners' DNA didn't match. How do microbiologists identify a strain of anthrax bacteria from an exceedingly small sample? Yup. PCR.
Mullis, Kary B. mullis, kary B. My father Cecil Banks mullis and mother, formerly Bernice Alberta Barker grew up in rural North Carolina in the http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/Mullis/Mullis.
Extractions: Mullis, Kary B. My father Cecil Banks Mullis and mother, formerly Bernice Alberta Barker grew up in rural North Carolina in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. My dad's family had a general store, which I never saw. My grandparents on his side had already died before I started noticing things. My mother's parents were close to me all during my childhood, and her father Albert stopped by to see me in a non-substantial form on his way out of this world in 1986. I was living in California. "Pop" died at 92 and wondering what was happening to me out in California, stopped by Kensington for a couple days. My house afforded a view of San Francisco and the Golden Gate Bridge. His visit was an odd experience. Not at all frightening. I have cultivated the curious things in life and found this one pleasant. "Pop" and I sat in the evenings in my kitchen and I told him about the contemporary California world while we drank beer. I drank his for him as it appeared that although he was very much there for me, he was not there at all for the beer. Many of my friends when I told them of this thought it fanciful. (I think it more likely than much of our math today and at least half of our physics, both of which I like). Until I was five my immediate family lived near my grandfather's farm where my mother had grown up, and with the exception of a few modern conveniences, had not changed a lot over the years. My grandfather milked several cows twice a day and supplied the neighbours with dairy products. He liked to go visiting around the county on Saturdays and he also enjoyed the neighbours when they came by once a week with their empty milk jars. He walked them out to their cars and hung over the driver's side window until they drove off. The road was two tire tracks on well mown grass between barbed wire fences, cows off to the right, alfalfa or sometimes corn to the left. I remember mostly the summers.
Kary B. Mullis Translate this page Chemienobelpreis 1993 (Nobel Prize Chemistry 1993) kary B. mullis, amerikan. Biochemiker, geb. 28. Dez. 1944. http://www.zuta.de/npchem/mullis.htm