Drosophila Papers Transport in Drosophila Embryos Forces and Kinetics Michael A. Welte, Steven P.Gross, Marya Postner, Steven M. Block, and eric F. wieschaus Summary Full http://lmls.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp/sonefiles/refsummary/cedro1998.htm
Climate News 12-7-01 Physics, 1998 Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu Peace, 1984 John Vane Physiology/Medicine,1982 John E. Walker Chemistry, 1997 eric F. wieschaus Physiology/Medicine http://www.webofcreation.org/ncc/news/Dec7.html
Science -- Author Index {19 March 1999; 283 (5409)} in Letters) Summary Full Text Westphal, Michael I. (in Policy Forum) Summary FullText Wickelgren, Ingrid (in News Focus) Letter wieschaus, eric F. (in Letters http://www.sciencemag.org/content/vol283/issue5409/aindex.shtml
Extractions: A B C D ... Z Ahern, Kevin (in ) Altshuler, B. L. (in Perspectives) Arrow, Kenneth J. (in Letters) Axelrod, Julius (in Letters) Aziz, Hany (in Reports) (in Reports) Balter, Michael (in News Focus) Baltimore, David (in Letters) Barinaga, Marcia (in News of the Week) Barinaga, Marcia (in News of the Week) Benacerraf, Baruj (in Letters) Bjorkman, Pamela J. (in Reports) Bloch, Konrad E. (in Letters) Bloembergen, Nicolaas (in Letters) Blumenthal, Jonathan (in Reports) Bradke, Frank (in Reports) Brand, Ulrike (in Reports) Brannon, Elizabeth M. (in Letters) Brown, Herbert C. (in Letters) Brown, Michael S. (in Letters) Brown;, Sandra (in Technical Comments) Campman, K. (in Reports) Chirino, Arthur J. (in Reports) Chiu, Daniel T. (in Reports) Cibelli, Jose B. (in Letters) Clarke, A. R. (in Reports) Cobb, Stephen (in Policy Forum) Cohen, Jon (in News of the Week) Cohen, Stanley (in Letters) Collinge, J. (in Reports) Collins, D. Louis (in Reports) Cooper, Leon N. (in Letters) Corey, E. J.
Science -- Table Of Contents {Mar 19 1999; 283 (5409)} O. Smith, Robert M. Solow, Henry Taube, Susumu Tonegawa, James D. Watson, StevenWeinberg, Thomas H. Weller, Michael D. West, eric F. wieschaus, Torsten N http://www.sciencemag.org/content/vol283/issue5409/index.shtml
Extractions: A Sinking Slab of Crust? * Chaos in the Outer Solar System * Molecular Chains * A Deeper Mantle Boundary? * An Electron Heart * An Insulator for Gallium Arsenide * Less Assembly Required * Forming Young Minds * Peptides Pattern Flowers * MHC Mimic * Becoming an Animal * Switching Prion States * Dendrite and Neurite Dynamics * Hold the Holes * Chemistry in Microflasks * Flies, Eyes, and Reliability * North American Carbon Sink Science Mar 19 1999: 1813 [Full Text] Research Article The Origin of Chaos in the Outer Solar System
Nobel Prizes Reflect The History Of Medical Research 1995 Edward B. Lewis and eric F. wieschaus, United States; and Christiane NuessleinVolhard,Germany; discoveries related to how genes control human http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/10/09/tem_nobel_prizes_reflect.html
Extractions: Three geneticists won the Nobel Prize for medicine this week for their studies of something that's been called cellular suicide. The Nobel committee Monday awarded Sydney Brenner and John E. Sulston of Great Britain and H. Robert Horvitz of the United States for discoveries concerning how genes regulate organ development and a process of programmed cell death. Here is a look at the exploration of new medical frontiers, as seen through the Nobel Prize committee: 2001: Leland H. Hartwell, United States; R. Timothy (Tim) Hunt and Sir Paul M. Nurse, Britain; for discovering key regulators of the process that lets cells divide, which is expected to lead to new cancer treatments. 2000: Arvid Carlsson, Sweden; Paul Greengard and Eric R. Kandel, United States; for research on how brain cells transmit signals to each other, thus increasing understanding of how the brain functions and how neurological and psychiatric disorders may be better treated. 1999: Guenter Blobel, United States, for protein research that shed new light on diseases, including cystic fibrosis and early development of kidney stones.
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft - Nobelpreisträger Der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft Translate this page 1995. Gemeinsam mit Edward B. Lewis und eric F. wieschaus für ihre Entdeckungenzur genetischen Kontrolle der frühen Embryonalentwicklung. http://www.mpg.de/ueberDieGesellschaft/profil/wissenschaftlichePreise/auszeichnu
Extractions: STARTSEITE Kontakt Presse Links Sitemap FAQs English document.write('Suchen '); Schnellzugriff BioMax GeoMax Help guests scientists Institute MaxPlanckForum Nachwuchsgruppen Pr¤sident Pr¤sidentenkommiss. Research Schools TechMax Veranstaltungen Wissenschaftsmagazin Institute, Projekte und Einrichtungen Forschungsgebiete Forschungs- ergebnisse ... Nobelpreis Nobelpreis An erster Stelle unter den wissenschaftlichen Preisen steht international der Nobelpreis. Seit Gr¼ndung der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft im Jahre 1948 z¤hlt sie allein f¼nfzehn Nobelpreistr¤ger in ihren Reihen. Hinzu kommen weitere f¼nfzehn Nobelpreise, mit denen Wissenschaftler der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft zwischen 1914 und 1948 ausgezeichnet wurden. Nobel e-Museum http://www.nobel.se Nobelpreis f¼r Chemie Gemeinsam mit Mario J. Molina und F. Sherwood Rowland f¼r ihre Arbeiten zur Atmosph¤renchemie, insbesondere zur Bildung und zum Abbau von Ozon. Paul Crutzen J. MPI f¼r Chemie
Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ïî ôèçèîëîãèè 1995 The prize was awarded jointly to EDWARD B. LEWIS, CHRISTIANE N?SSLEINVOLHARDand eric F. wieschaus for their discoveries concerning the genetic control http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_med.htm
Extractions: PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Physiology and Medicine Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David Banting, Sir Frederick Grant Barany, Robert Beadle, George Wells Behring, Emil Adolf Von Bekesy, Georg Von Benacerraf, Baruj Bergstroem, Sune K. Bishop, J. Michael Black, Sir James W. Bloch, Konrad Blumberg, Baruch S. Bordet, Jules Bovet, Daniel Brown, Michael S. Burnet, Sir Frank Macfarlane Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y Carrel, Alexis Chain, Sir Ernst Boris Claude, Albert Clintock, Barbara Mc Cohen, Stanley Cori, Carl Ferdinand Cori, Gerty Theresa Cormack, Alan M. Cournand, Andre Frederic Crick, Francis Harry Compton Dale, Sir Henry Hallett Dam, Henrik Carl Peter Dausset, Jean De Duve, Christian Delbruck, Max Doherty, Peter C.
Nobelist To Deliver 2nd Annual Kipnis Lecture Nobel Prize winner eric F. wieschaus, Ph.D., professor of molecular biology at PrincetonUniversity and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, will be http://record.wustl.edu/archive/1998/11-12-98/articles/nobelist.html
Extractions: The second annual David M. Kipnis lecture will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 19, in Moore Auditorium, 4580 Scott Ave. Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus, Ph.D., professor of molecular biology at Princeton University and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, will be the speaker. Wieschaus will discuss "From Molecular Patterns to Morphogenesis: The Lessons From Drosophila." He has played a central role in ushering in the modern era of developmental biology. In his pioneering work on the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, in collaboration with Christiane Nusslein-Volhard, Ph.D., Wieschaus used classical genetic screens to identify most of the zygotically-active genes required to assemble the young fly embryo. The genes identified during the course of these screens represent many of the most essential factors required for the early development of all multicellular organisms from flies to humans. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Nobel in Medicine and Physiology in 1995. The annual Kipnis lecture was established by the Department of Molecular Biology and Pharmacology to honor David Kipnis, M.D., Distinguished University Professor of Medicine and chair of the Department of Internal Medicine from 1972 to 1992.
Extractions: UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center CHAPEL HILL Scientists from across the nation, including a Nobel Prize winner, will gather at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill March 27-28 to discuss the basic mechanisms involved in developmental biology and their relation to cell survival and cancer. Nobel Prize winner Dr. Eric Wieschaus will be among the featured lecturers at the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Centers 26th Annual Scientific Symposium, "Developmental Biology: Implications for Human Cancers." During the symposiums second day, he will discuss what model organisms have taught scientists. "This will be an absolutely fabulous meeting, bringing together scientists to discuss and explain the relationships between the biology of animal development and human cancer," said Dr. Albert Baldwin, symposium chairman, professor of biology and associate director of basic research at the Lineberger center.
SALVE Index Az 1970es évek végén két német biológus, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhardés eric F. wieschaus szekvenálta azokat a géneket, amelyek a muslinca http://bio.univet.hu/SALVE/GENE/homeo/!!!start.htm
Extractions: Az anatómusok korán rájöttek arra, hogy a gerincesek testfelépítése alapvetõen azonos. A hasonlóság különösen szembetûnõ az embrionális fejlõdés korai szakaszában. Please note, all pictures are copy-righted. In this lecture note illustration is presented as reminders of the lecture. Közérthetõ bevezetõ: PBS angolul www Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, francia zoológus egy lépéssel továbbment, amikor azt állította, hogy az össze állat testfelépítése visszavezethetõ egyetlen közös "tervrajzra". Van elejük és végük, jobb és bal oldaluk, hasuk és hátuk. A különbségek a részletekben vannak. Például a rovarok idegkötege a hasi, a gerinceseké a háti tájékon fut, ezért Saint-Hilaire úgy gondolta, hogy a gerincesek tulajdonképpen hanyattfordított rovarok! Az eredeti, õs tervrajz jobban megérthetõ az egyedfejlõdés legkorábbi szakaszának vizsgálatával. A gyümölcsmuslinca teste pl. 3 fõ részbõl áll (fej, tor , potroh). A muslinca embrióban azonban nem három, hanem 16 egyenlõ méretû szegmens jelenik meg elõszõr, és ezek összeolvadásából alakul ki a végzõ forma.
The Hindu : Laureates In Medicine: Down Memory Lane 1995 EDWARD B. LEWIS, CHRISTIANE NSSLEINVOLHARD and eric F. wieschaus for theirdiscoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/2001/10/25/stories/08250005.htm
Extractions: Front Page National Southern States Other States ... Next 2001 LELAND H. HARTWELL, R. TIMOTHY HUNT and PAUL M. NURSE for their discoveries of "key regulators of the cell cycle." 2000 ARVID CARLSSON, PAUL GREENGARD and ERIC KANDEL for their discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous system. 1999 GNTER BLOBEL, for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell. 1998 ROBERT F. FURCHGOTT, LOUIS J. IGNARRO and FERID MURAD for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system. 1997 STANLEY B. PRUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection 1996 PETER C. DOHERTY and ROLF M. ZINKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. 1995 EDWARD B. LEWIS, CHRISTIANE NSSLEIN-VOLHARD and ERIC F. WIESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. 1994 ALFRED G. GILMAN and MARTIN RODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.
Letter To Clinton And Congress Leon N. Cooper, Ph.D. Leon M. Lederman, Ph.D. Phillip A. Sharp, Ph.D. EricF. wieschaus, Ph.D. Dudley Herschbach, Ph.D. William N. Lipscomb, Ph.D. http://www.lbl.gov/Education/ELSI/Frames/research-letter-clinton-f.html
Extractions: Washington, D.C. 20500 Dear Mr. President: As men and women who have helped to shape the modern scientific age and who care deeply about the future of our nation, we urge you to reaffirm the fundamental role of the federal government in supporting basic scientific research. Americans have been awarded more than one-half of all Nobel Prizes in physics, chemistry and medicine since 1945. This impressive success is no accident, but the result of a firm and consistent commitment by the federal government to basic science research at our universities. Our nation's policymakers and public have been prudent investors because their support has paid off in tremendous ways. America's investment in research over the last fifty years has been a vital source of our economic and political strength around the world, as well as the quality of life Americans enjoy at home. The polio vaccine, computers, jet propulsion, and disease resistant grains and vegetables are some of the thousands of advances pioneered at our universities that have had dramatic benefits for our health, economy, security and quality of life. New and equally breathtaking advances may be just around the corner. Genetic research, for example, gives promise of better treatments for Alzheimer's, cancer and other diseases. Lighter and stronger composite materials may be developed with important applications in transportation, medicine and the military. Continuing support for university-based research will not only pave the way for these important breakthroughs, but will also train the next generation of pioneers and Nobelists.
Encyclopaedia Britannica: À§»þ¿ì½º The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://preview.britannica.co.kr/bol/topic.asp?mtt_id=127783
m[xãwÜ The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://www.eps4.comlink.ne.jp/~simoyama/novelig-e.htm
Extractions: m[xãwE¶wÜ Nx ãwE¶wÜ E.A.vonx[O hCc Emil Adolf von Behring R.X CMX Ronald Ross N.tBZ Niels Ryberg Finsen I.P.put VA Ivan Petrovich Pavlov R.Rbz hCc Robert Koch C.SW C^A Camillo Golgi S.ECEJn XyC Santiago Ramon y Cajal C.L.A.u tX Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran P.G[q hCc Paul Ehrlich E.`jRt VA Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov E.T.Rbq[ XCX Emil Theodor Kocher A.RbZ hCc Albrecht Kossel A.OXgh XEF[f Allvar Gullstrand A.J tX Alexis Carrel C.R.VF tX Charles Robert Richet R.oj[ I[XgA Robert Barany xM[ Robert Barany A.N[ Schack August Steenberg Krogh A.V.q CMX Archibald Vivian Hill hCc Otto Fritz Meyerhof F.oeBO Ji_ Frederick Grant Banting CMX John James Richard Macleod W.ACgz[tF I_ Willem Einthoven J.tB[rK[ Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger J.W.vonEbO I[XgA Julius Wagner-Jauregg C.J.H.jR tX Charles Jules Henri Nicolle F.G.zvLY
Premio Nóbel 2001 - Diario De Yucatán descubrimientos referentes al control genético del desarrollo embrionario http://www.yucatan.com.mx/especiales/nobel2001/medicina.asp
Extractions: Mayas ... Cines 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 1990 - 2000 2000.- Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard y Eric Kandel: "Por sus trabajos sobre la transmisión de la señal en el sistema nervioso 1999.- Günter Blobel: "por el descubrimiento que las proteínas tienen señales intrínsecas que gobiernan su transportación y localización en la célula". 1998.- Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro y Ferid Murad: "por sus descubrimientos referentes al óxido nítrico como una molécula de señalización en el sistema cardiovascular".