UPFRONT Turon murads Brother ferid Wins nobel Prize in Medicine. ferid muradhas won the nobel Prize for Medicine for his work with nitric http://www.csuchico.edu/pub/inside/archive/98_10_22/upfront.html
Extractions: Ferid Murad has won the Nobel Prize for Medicine for his work with nitric oxide and its impact on the human body. Ferid Murad, 62, is the older brother of Turon Murad, Anthropology, and one of three Murad brothers, each successful in his own right. Ferid Murad, who holds both a Ph.D. and an M.D., now works at the University of Texas Medical School. He has had a very productive career in both research and teaching. Although it was his intent after graduating from medical school to practice medicine, opportunity kept him in pharmacological research and teaching.. The whole Murad family worked hard in the family restaurant in Indiana. The elder Murads, themselves uneducated, were intent on providing an opportunity for work that their sons would love and that would take them beyond the world of steel mills which surrounded them. "Our father wanted us to love our work. And, indeed, each of the three of us is passionate about what we do: Ferid about his pharmacological research, our other brother about his work in dentistry, and, of course, I love my forensics research and work," said Murhad. Although it is certainly the highest and the best-rewarded, the Nobel Prize is not the only prestigious award Ferid has received. In 1996 Ferid received the Albert Lasker Award, often an indicator of who will be nominated for the Nobel.
Extractions: in humans is at the core of Medinox's NO-neutralizing pharmaceutical technologies. SAN DIEGO, CA. October 18, 1999 Medinox, Inc. has announced the appointment of Ferid Murad, M.D., Ph.D. to its Scientific Advisory Board. Dr. Murad is a co-recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work in discovering nitric oxide's (NO) role as a signaling molecule in humans. Dr. Murad is currently a Professor and Chairman in the Department of Integrative Biology, Pharmacology and Physiology at the University of Texas-Houston Medical School. Medinox is developing innovative NO-neutralizing pharmaceutical technologies to treat diseases and conditions associated with the overproduction of NO. Susanne Friestedt Monte Lai, Ph.D. Friestedt International Medinox, Inc.
Ferid Murad, M.D., Ph.D. ferid murad, MD, Ph.D. (1965, Western Reserve University) UTHouston Medical School,Integrative Biology and Physiology 1998 nobel Laureate in Physiology http://gsbs.gs.uth.tmc.edu/tutorial/murad.html
Extractions: (1965, Western Reserve University) UT-Houston Medical School, Integrative Biology and Physiology Contact Information Biographical Sketch 1998 Nobel Laureate in Physiology/Medicine Research Interests: Nitric oxide, cyclic GMP; cell signaling; second messengers; regulatory biology; molecular pharmacology The roles of nitric oxide and cyclic GMP in cell regulation, signal transduction, and regulatory biology. Research spans fundamental biochemistry, molecular biology, molecular pharmacology to cell biology and regulatory biology. Areas of interest include cardiovascular, neurobiology, and endocrinology. Our laboratory is considered one of the leading labs in nitric oxide and cyclic GMP. Murad F (1996) Signal transduction using nitric oxide and cyclic guanosine monophosphate. JAMA 276:1189-1192. Murad F (1999) Discovery of the biological effects of nitric oxide and its role in cell signaling. Bioscience Reports 19:133-154. Murad F (Ed) (1994) Advances in Pharmacology, Vol. 26. Cyclic GMP Synthesis, Metabolism and Function. Academic Press, pp. 1-335. Program Affiliation:
Nobel Prize Winner A CWRU School Of Medicine Graduate interview with murad. ferid murad, MD, Ph.D., 1998 nobel laureate andmember of the School of Medicine Class of 1965. Back to Main Page. http://mediswww.meds.cwru.edu/public_affairs/medlines/november/2.htm
Semaine Internationale Du Cerveau - Conférence De Ferid Murad Translate this page ferid murad. ferid murad obtient en 1998 le prix nobel de médecine,conjointement avec Robert F. Furchgott et Louis J. Ingnarro. http://www.unige.ch/evenements/cerveau/arch/2000/confMurad.html
Semaine Internationale Du Cerveau - CV Ferid Murad ferid murad, born September 14, 1936 in Whiting, Indiana, USA Address Departmentof Integrative Source site Internet de la Fondation nobel, www.nobel.se. http://www.unige.ch/evenements/cerveau/arch/2000/cvMurad.html
Science Center Nobel Laureates ferid murad received the 1998 nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for his discoveriesconcerning nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the cardiovascular http://www.cwru.edu/menu/sciencecenter/nobel_laureates.htm
Extractions: middle Nobel Laureates CWRU Home Page Welcome to CWRU! Admissions Academics University Departments Computing Resources University Libraries Research Student Life Alumni Relations News of CWRU Newsstand CWRU Directory Master Plan University Library Career Planning and Placement Undergraduate Admissions School of Graduate Studies Office of University Communication Sun. Apr 20 2003 Those professors and/or graduates from Case Western Reserve University
Ferid Murad, MED '65, GRS '65 Wins Nobel Prize In Medicine It's ferid murad, MED '65, GRS '65 Wins nobel Prize in Medicine. It's veryexciting to win the nobel Prizeit changes your life. There's http://www.cwru.edu/development/alum2/newsevents/publications/newff/archives/990
Extractions: Ferid Murad, MED '65, GRS '65 Wins Nobel Prize in Medicine "It's very exciting to win the Nobel Prizeit changes your life. There's lots of requests from people to come and work with you. All of a sudden, people think you know everything!" Dr. Ferid Murad certainly knows a lot. He recalls his student days at CWRU. "It was the first program in the country to offer the M.D./Ph.D. For me it was optimal training," he says. It led to 22 years of research into the properties of nitric oxide, a colorless, odorless gas. It also led to the discovery that the gas acts as a messenger to tell blood vessels to relax and widen, lowering blood pressure. It has applications ranging from treating heart disease and shock to reducing the possibility of a life threatening condition in premature babies called pulmonary hypertension. Dr. Murad's research continues. "There are still lots of things that can be done. We are hoping to find new pathways-new enzymes that affect nitric oxide." Ferid Murad email:
DePauw News Archive Index 199900 News Archive 1998-99 News Archive 1997-98 News Archive News-In-BriefArchive DePauw Alumnus ferid murad Shares nobel Prize in Medicine http://www.depauw.edu/pa/news/news_archive/archive9899/99murad_nobel.asp
Nobel 98 - 1 - NOVEMBRE 1998 Translate this page Le prix nobel de médecine 1998 récompense cette année les Américains RobertF. Furchgott (université de New York), ferid murad (école de médecine de http://www.cite-sciences.fr/actu/numeros/N64_nov98/kiosques/html/nobel1.html
Extractions: "La découverte du NO a ouvert de nombreuses voies de recherches. On sait, depuis, que le NO protège aussi nos artères des thromboses. Agissant de concert avec une autre molécule, la prostacycline, il empêche les plaquettes sanguines d'adhérer à la paroi vasculaire. Mais il reste aussi plein d'interrogations. Comment se fait le transport du NO de l'endothélium où il est produit jusqu'au muscle lisse dont il commande le relâchement? La question n'est pas aujourd'hui complètement résolue. Qui déclenche la production de NO dans la cellule endothéliale? Là aussi, on soupçonne, entre autres choses, que les variations de flux sanguin jouent le rôle de signal. Un autre débat consiste à savoir si NO est une hormone. Autrement dit, quel est son rayon d'action ?..." Les questions foisonnent.
The Scientist - Nobel Honors Pioneers Of NO No sooner had the Swedish nobel committee announced that Robert Furchgott, LouisIgnarro, and ferid murad had won the 1998 prize for physiology or medicine http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1998/nov/lewis_p1_981123.html
Extractions: News By Ricki Lewis and Barry A. Palevitz Scientific insight sometimes comes from the unanticipated convergence of ideas and findings. This is certainly the case for nitric oxide (NO), a molecule whose simplicity belies its profound impact on organisms as diverse as humans and Arabidopsis Robert Furchgott, distinguished professor of pharmacology at the State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn; Louis Ignarro, professor of pharmacology at the University of California at Los Angeles; and Ferid Murad, professor and chair of the department of integrative biology, pharmacology, and physiology at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston. Theirs was an exciting journey that incorporated various facets of the scientific processserendipity, inexplicable results, disparate discoveries, and the conundrum of whether a clever hypothesis or the experimenting that tests it deserves more recognition. The Karolinska Institute, which picks the recipients, heralded the discovery of NO's functions as "an entirely new principle for signaling in biological systems" and "the first discovery that a gas can act as a signal molecule...", despite the fact that botanists have long known of the gaseous messenger and plant growth regulator ethylene. Hans Kende
CNN - US Discoverers Of Viagra Principle Get Nobel Prize - CNN.comCategory News Online Archives CNN.com 1998 October Health ferid murad, 62, is a researcher at the University of Texas murad discovered in 1977that nitroglycerin and similar around the world, the nobel committee said http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/9810/12/nobel.prize.02/
Dr. Ferid Murad Presents Nitric Oxide Lecture COLLEGE STATION Dr. ferid murad, a 1998 nobel Prize winner, will be the keynotespeaker for a cardiovascular forum sponsored by the Texas A M System Health http://www.tamu.edu/univrel/aggiedaily/news/stories/99/021799-5.html
Extractions: Murad, of the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, will present a lecture titled "Nitric Oxide and Cyclic GMP Signaling." Murad, in collaboration with colleagues, won the Nobel Prize for medicine and physiology last year for landmark work on nitric oxide (NO), a gas that transmits signals in organisms. His research analyzed how this particular gas relaxes smooth muscle cells.
Nature Publishing Group The nobel committee has once again sparked controversy, particularly in Britain ofthe University of California, Los Angeles, and ferid murad, of University of http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v395/n6703/full/
Nature Publishing Group and murad shared the 1996 Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research, whichis often considered a predictor of future nobel Prize winners. ferid murad. http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nm/journal/v4/n11/full/nm1198_1
October 16, 1998, Hour 2 1998 Nobel Prizes Guests ferid murad 1998 nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine Professor andChairman, Department of Integrative Biology, Pharmacology, and Physiology http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/1998/Oct/hour2_101698.html
Murad, Ferid murad, ferid (1936). August, 1913, asked his name, after which the officer declaredhim to be John murad and stamped His recent comment was, one nobel to zero http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/Murad/Murad.ht
Extractions: My mother also ran away from home at 17 in 1935 to marry my father who was 39. I was born September 14, 1936 at home in their hot and small apartment over a bakery in Whiting, Indiana. My brothers John Abderhaman and Turhon Allen were born in 1938 and 1944. We were raised in a four room aparttment behind my parents' restaurant in Whiting, Indiana. This small apartment undoubtedly influenced my desire for large expensive homes. With this background I knew that I wanted considerable education so I wouldn't have to work as hard as my parents. Also, I knew at the age of 12 that I was going to become a doctor. My parents always encouraged us to get an education and establish a profession. However, my brothers and I grew up with considerable freedom whether it was saving or spending our tips from the restaurant or our career choices. This was also applied to our religious choices as my father was Muslim, my mother Baptist and we were raised in a Catholic community. Subsequently, my brothers became Catholic when they married Catholic wives and I was baptized Episcopalian in college. My wife of more than forty years is Presbyterian, two of our daughters married Jewish men and one married a Catholic man. There was one notable friend since kindergarten, Ronald Delismon, who influenced me considerably. We competed constantly with everything: grades, chess, fencing, sports, etc. Today he is an aeronautical engineer recently retired from Boeing. His projects were always top secret such as the stealth bomber and some of the star war defense projects. He would never discuss his work with me for security reasons and often joked with me by saying, "if I told you, I would then have to kill you". After 57 years we remain the best of friends and still compete, generally at golf, skiing and more pleasant encounters. His recent comment was, "one Nobel to zero".
Murad Wins Distinguished AAMC Award murad Wins Distinguished AAMC Award. ferid murad, MD, Ph.D. HOUSTONnobel Laureateferid murad, MD, Ph.D., professor and holder of the John S. Dunn Sr. http://www.uthouston.edu/forMedia/newsreleases/nr2000/aamc-murad.htm
Distinctions - January 2002 - Exploring New Directions To nobel Laureate ferid murad, MD, Ph.D., fundamental research is anexciting adventure you don't know where it's going to take you. http://www.uthouston.edu/distinctions/archive/2002/jan/explore.html
Extractions: Just as his own research into nitric oxide may be important in understanding diabetes and cancer as well as the neurological and cardiovascular systems, other fundamental research at the Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Diseases (IMM) may be important in diseases of the eye, the kidney, the brain or other organs. The power of scientific collaboration is the ability to realize much more quickly one's fundamental discoveries and the utility of science, to help patients, Murad said. "The beauty of research is that it takes you in all directions," said Murad, director of the IMM and holder of the John S. Dunn Sr. Distinguished Chair in Physiology and Medicine at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. "As a result, scientists can collaborate with a lot of people and never stop learning and exploring new directions. It never gets boring. Every day is a challenge with potential excitement, rewards and novel information.
Murad Guest Speaker At Sutherland Series nobel laureate Dr. ferid murad, professor and chair of Integrative Biology andPharmacology at the University of TexasHouston Medical School, presented http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/reporter/?ID=1432