Doherty, Peter C. doherty, peter C. (1940). Eric doherty, a clever and entertaining man, trained initiallyas a I share Alfred nobel's conviction that war is the greatest of all http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/D/Doherty/Dohert
Extractions: Doherty, Peter C. My childhood was spent on the outskirts of the sub-tropical city of Brisbane. I have a younger brother, Ian, and we grew up as part of a traditional, extended family that was very much influenced by the values of our two grandmothers. The one was a devout Methodist, the other a lapsed Quaker who was born in England and embraced the informal Australian life style with great enthusiasm. My parents (Linda and Eric) were first and second generation Australians, the various elements of the family coming from County Louth (in the 1840's), Lancashire and Essex. Eric Doherty, a clever and entertaining man, trained initially as a telephone mechanic and was an administrator involved in the planning of telephone services. His mother had been left in straitened financial circumstances when my grandfather succumbed to pneumonia during the 1919 influenza epidemic. My father communicated his frustration at not having received an adequate formal education and, with his strong encouragement, the desire to learn and understand became the major focus of my life. Linda Byford was a piano teacher who, with her two brothers, spent much of her youth on the tennis court. After marriage she cared for her family, played Chopin Debussy , and Beethoven and grew roses. She gave me an appreciation, and emotional need for, classical music, but did not pass on the genes for tennis. The Byfords were devastated by the death of the eldest son, who was captured at the fall of Singapore and lost in a Japanese transport torpedoed by an American submarine. I remember my other Byford uncle shivering with recurrent malaria that he contracted during the fighting in New Guinea. I share Alfred Nobel's conviction that war is the greatest of all human disasters. Infectious disease runs a good second.
Themes Geography History History Prize Winners Nobel Themes Geography History History Prize Winners nobel Prize Medicine. Year, Winners. 1996, doherty, peter C. Zinkernagel, Rolf M. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/GeogHist/histories/prizewinners/nobelprize/m
Doherty, Zinkernagel Win Nobel Prize, NIAID News Release is a longterm grantee, have been awarded the 1996 nobel Prize in Physiology orMedicine, says Anthony S. Fauci, MD, NIAID director. peter C. doherty, Ph.D http://www.niaid.nih.gov/newsroom/releases/nobel.htm
Extractions: folkers@nih.gov Doherty, Zinkernagel Win Nobel Prize "The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) is very pleased that two of our colleagues in immunology research, one of whom is a long-term grantee, have been awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine," says Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., NIAID director. Peter C. Doherty, Ph.D., an NIAID grantee since 1977, and Rolf M. Zinkernagel, Ph.D., an NIAID grantee in the late 1970s and mid-1980s, received the award today for their discovery of how the immune system recognizes virus-infected cells. "Their observations paved the way for the current understanding of how the immune system recognizes both microbial invaders and the body's own cells," says Dr. Fauci. The two scientists collaborated on their prize-winning research between 1973 and 1975 at the John Curtin School of Medical Research in Canberra, Australia. Dr. Doherty is currently chairman of the immunology department at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., and holds the hospital's Michael F. Tamer Endowed Chair for Immunology Biomedical Research. Dr. Zinkernagel is professor and director of the Institute of Experimental Immunology at the University of Zurich in Switzerland. "Dr. Doherty and Dr. Zinkernagel established that the immune system recognizes microbial antigens in association with self molecules known as major histocompatibility antigens on a cell's surface," says Dr. Fauci. "Not only did their observations reveal how the immune system recognizes microbial invaders, but they also helped us understand, more broadly, how the immune system recognizes a molecule as self or non-self."
SIMR - Centenary Survey Of Nobel Laureates Progress in all areas of medicine is enormously enhanced by the new gene 'knockout'and transgenic mouse technologies. peter C. doherty, nobel Prize Winner http://www.simr.org.uk/pages/nobel/time_line_10.html
Extractions: "Animal experimentation has been essential to development of all cardiac surgery, transplantation surgery, joint replacements and all vaccinations. The world is not flat." - Joseph E. Murray, M.D., Nobel Prize Winner 1990 Erwin NEHER and Bert SAKMANN - describe chemical communications between cells. Edmond H. FISCHER and Edwin G. KREBS - show cells can adapt pre-existing proteins for a job rather than make new ones from scratch. Richard J. ROBERTS and Philip A. SHARP - show how DNA and individual genes can relate differently in different circumstances. Alfred G. GILMAN and Martin RODBELL - show how individual cells interpret chemical signals, and separately how a chemical, guanosine triphosphate (GTP), enables us to see, smell and taste. Edward B. LEWIS, Christiane NUSSLEIN-VOLHARD and Prof. Eric E. WIESCHAUS describe genetic control of early embryonic development.
CNN - Nobel Prize Awarded For Work In Immunology - Oct. 7, 1996 CNN.comCategory News Online Archives CNN.com 1996 October World $1.12 million dollar nobel Prize in medicine would be awarded to a team studyinghow the immune system recognizes viruses. Australian peter doherty and Swiss http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9610/07/nobel/
Extractions: Web posted at: 9:15 a.m. EDT (1315 GMT) STOCKHOLM, Sweden (CNN) The Nobel Assembly announced Monday the $1.12 million dollar Nobel Prize in medicine would be awarded to a team studying how the immune system recognizes viruses. Australian Peter Doherty and Swiss-born Rolf Zinkernagel worked on the prize-winning project while both were at the John Curtin School of Medical Research in Canberra, Australia, from 1973 to 1975. The pair's work "relates both to efforts to strengthen the immune response against invading microorganisms and certain form of cancer, and to efforts to diminish the effects of autoimmune reactions in inflammatory disease," the Karolinska Institute said in a statement announcing the prize. The two scientists used mice to study how the immune system, particularly T-lymphocytes, recognize virus-infected cells and distinguish them from healthy cells. They discovered "killer lymphocytes," which in a test tube attacked and killed cells infected by a virus. But they also discovered that the "killer T-cells" worked only against a specific virus in a specific mouse and could not be transferred to a different animal. Such discoveries have had a significant impact on the study of diseases such as rheumatic conditions, multiple sclerosis and diabetes, the institute said.
Extractions: Return to Table of Contents : WVA Bulletin Vol. 18 Nr. 1 January 2001 Presented by: Peter C. Doherty, DVSC, PHD, FRS 1996 Recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine 4 April 2001, 4:00 P.M. University of Texas School of Public Health Auditorium Houston, Texas The Ninth Annual James H. Steele Lecture will be held April 4. The lectureship was established in 1993, to recognize the enormous contributions of James H. Steele, D.V.M., to the field of infectious diseases and zoonoses. Dr Peter C. Doherty is the Chairman of the Department of Immunology at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital a nonprofit research hospital dedicated to the treatment of children from all over the world with catastrophic diseases. He also holds the position of Professor in the Department of Pathology at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, Health Science Center. Dr Doherty is the recipient of the 1983 Paul Ehrilich Prize, Germany, the 1986 Gairdner International Award for Medicine Science, and the 1995 Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award. In 1996 Dr Doherty was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research in cell-mediated immunity. Dr Doherty is a 1987 Fellow of the Royal Society of London and was elected foreign associate to the National Academy of Sciences in 1998. He qualified in veterinary medicine from the University of Queensland, Australia in 1966. He then obtained his Ph.D. in Pathology from the University of Edinburg, Scotland in 1970.
Premios Nobel De Medicina Premios nobel de Medicina. los decubrimientos relacionados a la especificidad de larespuesta inmune mediada por células , doherty, peter C.; Zinkernagel, Rolf M http://fai.unne.edu.ar/biologia/nobeles/nobelmed.htm
Extractions: Premios Nobel de Medicina 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 Dam, Henrik Carl Peter; Doisy, Edward Adelbert Erlanger, Joseph; Gasser, Herbert Spencer
University Of Zurich - About The University Director of the Institute for Experimental Immunology, was awarded the nobel Prizefor Medicine together with the Australian researcher peter C. doherty. http://www.unizh.ch/info/universitaet/nobel.en.html
Extractions: together with Peter Doherty "For research on the biochemical mechanism with which the immune system recognizes and destroys virus-infected cells." Born 6.1.1944 in Basel In 1996, Professor Rolf M. Zinkernagel, Director of the Institute for Experimental Immunology, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine together with the Australian researcher Peter C. Doherty. They were both honoured for discovering how the human immune system can distinguish between infected and non-infected cells. Today Zinkernagel works, together with Professor Hans Hengartner and 30 colleagues, on so-called autoimmune diseases such as juvenile diabetes and multiple sclerosis. At the University of Zurich: since 1979 Professor of Experimental Immunology
Rolf Zinkernagel Nobelpreis 1996 - Institut Für Experimentelle Immunologie - De Translate this page dieses Jahr an den Australier peter C. doherty und als Postdoktorand in Zusammenarbeitmit peter doherty über die nützliche links http//www.nobel.se/medicine http://www.unizh.ch/pathol/experimentelle-immunologie/d/pti_rzi_nob.html
Extractions: Daniel J. DeNoon, Senior Editor CW HENDERSON PUBLISHER Vaccines that elicit cell mediated immunity (CMI) are on the way, predicted 1996 Nobel Prize winner Peter C. Doherty. Doherty and colleague Rolf M. Zinkernagel jointly won medicine's top honor for their discovery that CMI responses are triggered by the T-cell recognition of foreign antigens in the context of the "self" molecules now known as major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens. They published the key findings of this work in 1974 ( Nature 1974 Apr 19;248(450):701-2 and Nature 1974 Oct 11;251(5475):547-8 "In actual fact you can get a tremendous boosting effect in a chronic virus situation," Doherty said. "Now I find myself talking about post-exposure vaccines, which I never thought I would." Doherty spoke in the keynote address to the Second Annual Conference on Vaccine Research, held March 28-30, 1999, in Bethesda, Maryland.
AEGiS-AP Nobel Man AIDS Vaccine Likely STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) A winner of this year's nobel Prize in medicine predicted spokeat a news conference along with cowinner peter C. doherty. http://www.aegis.com/news/ap/1996/AP961208.html
Extractions: Kevin Costelloe, Associated Press Writer STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) A winner of this year's Nobel Prize in medicine predicted Saturday that within 10 years there will be a vaccine to delay the outbreak of full-blown AIDS in people infected with the HIV virus. Rolf M. Zinkernagel also said the vaccine he envisioned would vastly reduce chances that an HIV-infected person would transfer the virus to other people. But Zinkernagel said such a vaccine would not completely eliminate chances of infection. For those inoculated, it might take 20 to 40 years to develop AIDS after being infected with HIV, he said. It currently takes about 10 years or so for an infected person to develop full-blown AIDS, the debilitating disease that ravages the body's natural ability to ward off illness. Zinkernagel, a researcher at the Institute of Experimental Immunology in Zurich
4/24/2001, 245th Commencement - Almanac, Vol. 47, No. 31 peter C. doherty, DV.Sc., Ph Jude Children's Hospital, and Professor of Pathology,University of Tennessee; 1996 nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine http://www.upenn.edu/almanac/v47/n31/commencement2001.html
Extractions: 245th Commencement University of Pennsylvania Commencement Events 2001 Sunday, May 20 Irvine Auditorium 1:30 p.m.Ceremony for students whose last name begins with A-K 3 p.m.Ceremony for students whose last name begins with L-Z Speaker: Reverend Dr. Floyd H. Flake , pastor of the Allen African Methodist Episcopal Church in New York, and retired U.S. Representative Monday, May 21 Franklin Field Speaker: U.S. Senator John McCain Peter C. Doherty D.V.Sc., Ph.D., Chairman of the Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Hospital, and Professor of Pathology, University of Tennessee; 1996 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine; Doctor of Science FAIA, and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, FAIA, Architects and Urban Designers, Duany Plater-Zyberk and Company; Doctor of Fine Arts Daniel Kahneman, Ph.D., Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology and Professor of Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University; Doctor of Science The Honorable John S. McCain,
Premio Nobel De Medicina - Wikipedia Translate this page Ver enlace http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html. Furchgott, Louis J.Ignarro, Ferid Murad 1997 Stanley B. Prusiner 1996 peter C. doherty, Rolf M http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premio_Nobel/Medicina
Extractions: Portada Cambios Recientes Edita esta página Historia Páginas especiales Preferencias de usuario Mi lista de seguimiento Cambio Recientes Subir una imagen Lista de imágenes Usuarios registrados Estadísticas del sitio Artículo aleatorio Artículos huérfanos Imágenes huérfanas Artículos populares Artículos más solicitados Artículos cortos Artículos largos Artículos nuevos Todas las páginas (alfabético) Direcciones IP bloqueadas Página de mantención Fuentes externas de libros Versión para imprimir Discusión Registrase/Entrar Ayuda (Redirigido desde Premio Nobel/Medicina Ver enlace: http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html Leland H. Hartwell R. Timothy Hunt Paul M. Nurse ... Harold E. Varmus Sir James W. Black Gertrude B. Elion George H. Hitchings Susumu Tonegawa ... Barbara McClintock for transposon work. Sune K. Bergström Bengt I. Samuelsson John R. Vane Roger W. Sperry ... Earl W. Sutherland, Jr. Sir Bernard Katz Ulf von Euler Julius Axelrod Max Delbrück ... Feodor Lynen Sir John Carew Eccles Alan Lloyd Hodgkin Andrew Fielding Huxley Francis Harry Compton Crick ... Georg von Békésy Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet Peter Brian Medawar Severo Ochoa Arthur Kornberg ... Dickinson W. Richards
Premios Nobel De Fisiología Y Medicina Translate this page AÑO, PREMIOS nobel OTORGADOS EN FISIOLOGÍA Y MEDICINA. 1996, Zinkernagel, RolfM. (Suiza) doherty, peter C. (Australia). 1997, Prusiner, Stanley (EEUU). http://fcmjtrigo.sld.cu/nobel.htm
Extractions: Premio Nobel : premios concedidos cada año a personas, entidades u organismos por sus aportaciones extraordinarias realizadas durante el año anterior en los campos de la Física, Química, Fisiología y Medicina, Literatura, Paz y Economía. Otorgados por primera vez el 10 de diciembre de 1901, los premios están financiados por los intereses devengados de un fondo en fideicomiso contemplado en el testamento del químico, inventor y filántropo sueco Alfred Bernhard Nobel. Además de una retribución en metálico, el ganador del Premio Nobel recibe también una medalla de oro y un diploma con su nombre y el campo en que ha logrado tal distinción. Los jueces pueden dividir cada premio entre dos o tres personas, aunque no está permitido repartirlo entre más de tres. Si se considerara que más de tres personas merecen el premio, se concedería de forma conjunta. El fondo está controlado por un comité de la Fundación Nobel, compuesto por seis miembros en cada mandato de dos años: cinco elegidos por los administradores de los organismos contemplados en el testamento, y el sexto nombrado por el Gobierno sueco. Los seis miembros serán ciudadanos suecos o noruegos. De acuerdo con la voluntad de Nobel, se han establecido institutos separados en Suecia y Noruega para favorecer los objetivos de la Fundación con el fin de potenciar cada uno de los cinco campos en los que se conceden los galardones. En 1968, para conmemorar su 300 aniversario, el Banco Nacional de Suecia creó el Premio de Ciencias Económicas Banco de Suecia en Memoria de Alfred Nobel, que sería otorgado por la Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias (conocida con anterioridad por el nombre de Academia Sueca de las Ciencias). La Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias concede también los premios de Física y Química.
Featured Speakers peter C. doherty, winner of the 1996 nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine, waseducated in veterinary science at the University of Queensland and received http://www.isac-net.org/congresses/ISACFA/Speakers.html
Extractions: Peter C. Doherty Peter C. Doherty , winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine, was educated in veterinary science at the University of Queensland and received his Ph.D. in pathology from the University of Edinburgh. He has held positions at the Moredun Research Institute in Edinburgh, the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, and the Australian National University in Canberra. In 1988, Dr. Doherty was appointed chairman, Department of Immunology at St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, a position he currently holds. In addition to the Nobel Prize, awards received by Dr. Doherty include the Paul Ehrlich Prize, Germany; the Gairdner International Award, Medical Science; and the Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and foreign associate to the National Academy of Sciences.
Extractions: Posted 15/8/01 Sign up here for free email updates! We know what we are, but what may we become? Who are we? Where do we come from? What does it all mean? Biological scientists like me have a few insights on the first two, but are generally content to leave the last one to the visionaries, the philosophers, and the Hollywood fantasy machine. The big excitement in science is that the "who are we" question is in the process of being opened out in the most extraordinary way. What is being uncovered stands to have major impact on human society, and is already changing how thinking people perceive themselves and their place in the natural world. I would like to convey to you some sense of what has happened and is happening now. What happens next is up to us.
Teaching Resources - Famous Australian Scientists peter C. doherty Autobiography from nobel e-museum http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1996/doherty-autobio.htmlEccles. http://science.uniserve.edu.au/school/resource/famsci.html
Eyes On The Nobel Prize and Jens C. Skou. The surprise has been how conscious people are of the nobelPrize. You become an institution. Dr. peter doherty, nobel Prize winner, http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/world/nobelmainbar1008/
American Wins Nobel In Medicine cow disease and other brainwasting conditions won the nobel Prize in award wentto Rolf M. Zinkernagel of Switzerland and peter C. doherty, an Australian http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/world/nobel106/
Nobel Prizes In Medicine And Physiology nobel Prizes in Medicine and Physiology. Deutsche Version. (List, not checked). Nature287, 795 (1980)) 1996 peter C. doherty (Australia, *194010-15) Rolf M http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_medizin_e.html
Extractions: (List, not checked) E. A. v. Behring (Germany) Sir R. Ross (United Kingdom) N. R. Finsen (Denmark) I. P. Pawlow (Russia) R. Koch (Germany) C. Golgi (Italy) (Spain) Ch. L. A. Laveran (France) P. Ehrlich (Germany) I. Metschnikow (France, Russia) Th. Kocher (Switzerland) A. Kassel (Germany) A. Gullstrand (Sweden) A. Carrel (USA, France) Ch. Richet (France) (Austria) J. Bordet (Belgium) A. Krogh (Denmark) A. V. Hill (United Kingdom) O. Meyerhof (Germany) F. G. Banting (Canada) J. J. R. Macleod (Canada) W. Einthoven (Netherlands) J. Fibiger (Denmark) J. Wagner-Jauregg (Austria) Ch. Nicolle (France) Chr. Eijkman (Netherlands) Sir F.G. Hopkins (United Kingdom) K. Landsteiner (USA, Austria) O. H. Warburg (Germany) Ch. S. Sherrington (United Kingdom) E.D. Adrian (United Kingdom) Th. H. Morgan (USA) G. R. Minot (USA) W. P. Murphy (USA) G.H. Whipple (USA) H. Spemann (Germany) Sir H.H. Dale (United Kingdom) Otto Loewi (Austria, 1873-06-03 - 1961-12-25) (Hungary) C. Heymans (Belgium) G. Domagk