Zientzia Eta Teknologiaren Ataria Aurtengo Medikuntza eta Fisiologiako nobel Sariak banatzerakoan, aipaturiko gizonezkoestatubatuar, Edward Lewis eta eric F. wieschaus, lehenak Californiako http://www.zientzia.net/artikulua.asp?Artik_kod=4318
Ir Al Home Page Home Page Translate this page Premios nobel de Fisiología y Medicina Año, Premiado, Pais, Campo de Estudio. 1995,Edward B. Lewis Christiane Nuesslein-Vohard eric F. wieschaus, http://www.neuroc.sld.cu/nobel.htm
Extractions: @import url(maintext.css); Home Page Premios Nobel de Fisiología y Medicin a Año Premiado Pais Campo de Estudio Emil von Behring Alemania Investigaciones en sueroterapia. Sir Ronald Ross Reino Unido Descubrimiento de la forma de transmisión del paludismo. Niels R. Finsen Dinamarca Tratamiento de las enfermedades de la piel con radiación luminosa. Iván Pávlov Rusia Investigaciones sobre fisiología de la digestión. Robert Koch Alemania Investigación de la tuberculosis. Camillo Golgi Rusia Trabajos sobre inmunidad. Emil Kocher Suiza Fisiología, patología y cirugía de la glándula tiroides. Albrecht Kossel Alemania Investigaciones en química celular. Allvar Gullstrand Suecia Estudio de la dióptrica del ojo. Alexis Carrel Francia Investigaciones sobre suturas vasculares; trasplante de órganos. Charles Richet Francia Estudios sobre anafilaxia.
EMBO - Promoting Molecular Biology In Europe. 1995. eric F. wieschaus (Associate Member). 1996. Rolf M. Zinkernagel. 2002. SydneyBrenner H. Robert Horvitz John E. Sulston. The nobel Prize in Chemistry. http://www.embo.org/organisation/nobel.html
Extractions: links: EMBO members back to EMBO start page Sydney Brenner (EMBO Member), H. Robert Horvitz and John E. Sulston (EMBO Member) received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2002 "for their discoveries concerning genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death". (EMBO Member) received one half of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2002 "for his development of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for determining the three-dimensional structure of biological macromolecules in solution". Well done! Congratulations to all of them. Arthur Kornberg Peter Brian Medawar Francis Harry Compton Crick James Dewey Watson
The Scientist - Meaningful Mutations Press, 1996) The number of women that have received nobel Prizes is very Biologyin Tubingen, Germany, was selected along with eric F. wieschaus, 48, Squibb http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1995/nov/nobel_951113.html
Extractions: News By Karen Young Kreeger Peace Prizes Author: Karen Young Kreeger Sidebar: 1995 Scientific Laureates Last month's announcements of the 1995 Nobel Prize recipients in the sciences were greeted with hearty approval by scientists from various sectors of the research community. Many of these investigators felt a sense of validation for their fields in the selection committees' choices. In physiology or medicine, the burgeoning discipline of developmental biology was recognized, and the subdiscipline of atmospheric chemistry was honored for the first time. Meanwhile, in physics, two discoverers of subatomic particles were named as laureates, an accolade that some physicists say was long overdue. This year, as well, the influence of researchers extended beyond the laboratory, as a scientist and a scientist- initiated group were named as the recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize. The last scientist recognized in this way received the honor 20 years ago. Another Nobel milestone was reached as the 10th woman scientist in the history of the prizes was named a laureate. "I was pleased to see that a woman was included," says Harriet Zuckerman, vice president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in New York and author of Scientific Elite: Nobel Laureates in the United States (2d ed., New Brunswick, N.J., Transaction Press, 1996) "The number of women that have received Nobel Prizes is very small. It was good to see someone who is youngish and in the full force of her career be honored."
PREMIOS NOBEL DE MEDICINA PREMIOS nobel DE MEDICINA. AÑO, PREMIADO. 1995, EDWARD B.LEWIS CHRISTIANE NUSSLEIN-VOLHARD- eric F.wieschaus. 1996, PETER C.DOHERTY - ROLF M.ZINKERNAGEL. http://es.geocities.com/historalia/premios_nobel_medicina.htm
Extractions: PREMIOS NOBEL DE MEDICINA AÑO PREMIADO EMIL ADOLF VON BEHERING RONALD ROSS NIELS RYBERG FINSEN IVAN PETROVICH PAVLOV CAMILLO GOLGI - SANTIAGO RAMON Y CAJAL CHARLES LOUIS ALPHONSE LAVERAN ILYA ILYCH MECHNIKOV - PAUL EHRLICH EMIL THEODOR KOCHER ALBRECHT KOSSEL ALLVAR GULLSTRAND ALEXIS CARREL CHARLES ROBERT RICHET ROBERT BARANY JULES BORDET SCHACK AUGUST STEENBERG KROGH ARCHIBALD VIVIAN HILL - OTTO FRITZ MEYERHOF FREDERICK GRANT BENTING - JOHN JAMES RICHARD MACLEOD WILLEM EINTHOVEN JOHANNES ANDREAS GRIB FIBIGER JULIUS WAGNER-JAUREGG CHARLES JULES HENRI NICOLLE CHRISTIAN EIJKMAN -SIR FREDERICK GOWLAND HOPKINS KARL LANDSTEINER OTTO HEINRICH WARBURG SIR CHARLES SCOTT SHERRINGTON - EDGAR DOUGLAS ADRIAN THOMAS HUNT MORGAN GEORGE HOYT WHIPPLE - GEORGE RICHARDS MINOT - WILLIAM PARRY MURPHY HANS SPEMANN SIR HENRY HALLET DALE - OTTO LOEWL ALBERT VON SZENT-GYORGY NAGYRAPOLT CORNEILLE JEAN FRANÇOIS HEYMANS GERHARD DOMAGK HENRIK CARL PETER DAM - EDWARD ADELBERT DOLSY JOSEPH ERLANGER - HERBERT SPENCER GASSER SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING - ERNST BORIS CHAIN - SIR HOWARD WALTER FLOREY HERMANN JOSEPH MULLER CARL FERDINAND CORI - GERTY THERESA RADNITZ-CORI - BERNARDO ALBERTO HOUSSAY PAUL HERMANN MULLER WALTER RUDOLF HESS - ANTONIO CAETANO DE ABREU FREIRE EGAS MONIZ EDWARD CALVIN KENDALL - TADEUS REICHSTEIN - PHILIP SHOWALTER HENCH MAX THEILER SELMAN ABRAHAM WAKSMAN HANS ADOLF KREBS - FRITZ ALBERT LIPMANN
Génétique Du Développement De L'oeil SNOF Translate this page Le Prix nobel fut attribué en 1995 à Edward B. Lewis, Christianne Nüsslein-Volhardet eric F. wieschaus pour avoir exploré le contrôle génétique du http://www.snof.org/maladies/embryogen2.html
Extractions: jmm Historique Face Embryo oeil Avec l'aimable autorisation du Pr. Gehring mutations small eye Sey ) chez la souris , et " Aniridia " chez l'Homme homozygotes Les mutations small eye et Aniridia orthologues mouche drosophila melanogaster eyeless Rebecca Quiring 14 yeux Walter J.Gehring , en transcription de eyeless sur les pattes , les antennes et les ailes de la souris dans une larve de mouche mouches 500 millions Par simplification small eye ' chez la souris, 'eyeless' chez la mouche et 'aniridia' orthologues grenouilles Xenopus texte public en anglais Pr Gehring Eyeless initiates the expression of both sine oculis and eyes absent during Drosophila compound eye development ainsi qu'un autre de Veraska Del Campo et McGinnis , en anglais Developmental Patterning Genes and Their conserved functions, From model organisms to Humans. un souvenir commun Des mutations Aniridie L' aniridie absence d'iris glaucome , une hypoplasie maculaire , une luxation du cristallin , des ou une (tumeur de Wilms) ou un gonadoblastome , dans le cadre d'un syndrome WAGR W ilms tumor
Biblioteca De Ciències. Guies: Premis Nobel De Ciències 1995 heu de connectarvos al'adreça http//www.nobel.se. F. Reynes, 40 years of neutrinophysics , Progress in Particle eric wieschaus, de la Princeton University http://www.bib.uab.es/ciencies/nobel1995.htm
Extractions: desembre de 1995 La trobareu a The Nobel website, de la http://www.nobel.se Martin L. Perl Frederick Reines Martin L. Perl tau . Aquest descobriment va ser la primera evidència de l'existència d'una tercera "família" de partícules: anys després va descobrir-se el bottom quark top quark Frederick Reines Paul J. Crutzen Mario Molina Frank Sherwood Rowland (Delaware, Ohio, 1927), de la University of California at Irvine. Paul Crutzen
GSRS 2001 Friday will highlight cuttingedge research and features a keynote address fromPrinceton's eric F. wieschaus, winner of the 1995 nobel Prize in Medicine. http://info.med.yale.edu/bbs/B/1_2/gsrs.html
Extractions: Investigative Report by N. Sherer A candid photo Livid that your abstract was rejected by the Annual Meeting of Cell Biology? Fed up with academia and ready to run off to biotech or consulting for the promise of big bucks and dental insurance? Looking to mingle with a hot Nobel laureate over rock-and-roll, red wine, and chocolate crumpets? The Graduate Student Research Symposium (GSRS) may be your answer. GSRS 2001 is co-chaired by Chun Wu (Genetics) and Zia Ur-Rahman (MCDB). Chun and Zia, along with over 30 volunteers on 6 committees, have been planning the Symposium for several months. The format of the two day event is being reorganized to maximize enthusiasm and participation. For example, the traditional Friday night banquet will be replaced by an evening mixer featuring a performance by The Cell Mates (a BBS faculty/student rock band). Also, Friday's mini-symposia will be organized such that participants will be able to choose events specifically geared to their interests rather than having to sit through an afternoon of random posters and presentations. And in the spirit of collaboration and diplomacy, students from nearby institutions (e.g. Harvard, Columbia, MIT) will, for the first time, be invited to take part in Yale's unique symposium. "Yale is somewhat isolated from other institutions and we want to promote a bigger research community", said Chun. What can the BBS community expect over the course of the two day event? Thursday will focus on careers in the biological and biomedical sciences and will feature panel discussions addressing three general fields: academia, industry, and alternative careers. Discussions will be moderated by visiting professionals interested in informing students and post-docs of the glories and agonies of their respective career paths. Also planned are various workshops devoted to grant writing, teaching, and the incredible importance of finding a quality thesis adviser (good luck first years!).
Advocacy In Action eric F. wieschaus*, Princeton University Torsten N. Wiesel*, The Rockefeller UniversityRobert W. Wilson*, HarvardSmithsonian Center for Astrophysics. * nobel http://www2.jdf.org/advocacy/testimony/index.cfm?testimony_id=132
American Wins Nobel In Medicine of Winners The previous years winnersEdward Lewis and eric F. wieschaus ofthe 10, the anniversary of the death of Alfred nobel, the industrialist and http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/world/nobel106/
Medical News 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/medical.html
Extractions: November 12, 1998 By Linda Sage People who suffer from depression have fewer cells in a certain part of the brain, a new study finds. This loss occurs only when the disorder runs in the family, suggesting that inherited depression may differ from other types of depression. "One of the things we hope may result from our findings is the recognition that there are important differences between patients with a familial history of depression and those without," said Joseph L. Price, Ph.D., who headed the research. "There might also be differences in appropriate drug therapies." Price is a professor of anatomy and neurobiology at the School of Medicine. Click to see entire article
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.
American Wins Nobel Prize For Medicine The previous year's winners Edward Lewis and eric F. wieschaus of the 10, the anniversaryof the death of Alfred nobel, the industrialist and inventor of http://www.jhu.edu/~newslett/10-09-97/Science/2.html
Extractions: Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - An American biologist who discovered the new class of germ that causes "mad cow" disease and other lethal brain-wasting conditions won the Nobel Prize in medicine. The finding may eventually shed light on Alzheimer's disease, the prize citation said. Stanley B. Prusiner of the University of California, San Francisco, was cited for his discovery of prions, "an entirely new genre of disease-causing agents... Prusiner has added prions to the list of well-known infectious agents, including bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites." The finding was controversial because prions, unlike other germs, contain no genetic material; they are simply proteins. The prize, worth $1 million, is awarded by Sweden's renowned Karolinska Institute. Last year, the British government warned that cattle with so-called mad cow disease were the most likely cause of a variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, another brain-wasting condition, in people. The CJD variant has killed about 20 people in Europe, nearly all in Britain. The human disease occurred after people ate tainted beef products from cattle that had been fed sheep offal containing prions.
Laureatii Premiilor Nobel 1995, Edward. B. Lewis Christiane Nüsslein Volhard eric F. wieschaus,Statele Unite ale Americii Germania Statele Unite ale Americii. http://www.rotravel.com/medicine/nobel/r_laur.htm
Extractions: Rusia Emil Theodor Kocher Elveþia Albrecht Kossel Germania Allvar Gulistrand Suedia Alexis Carrel Statele Unite ale Americii Charles Robert Richet Franþa Robert Báráni Ungaria - Austria neacordat neacordat neacordat neacordat Jules Jean Baptiste Vincent Bordet Belgia Schack August Steenberg Krogh Danemarca neacordat Sir Archibald Vician Hill
Extractions: Russia Emil Theodor Kocher Switzerland Albrecht Kossel Germany Allvar Gulistrand Sweden Alexis Carrel United States of America Charles Robert Richet France Robert Báráni Hungary - Austria no prize awarded no prize awarded no prize awarded no prize awarded Jules Jean Baptiste Vincent Bordet Belgium Schack August Steenberg Krogh Denmark no prize awarded Sir Archibald Vician Hill
February 9, 1998 eric F. wieschaus Squibb Professor of Molecular Biology Investigator, HowardHughes Medical Institute nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1995. http://www.jscpp.org/nobel.html
Extractions: February 9, 1998 To the President of the United States and Members of the United States Congress. There is a broad consensus supporting the President's National Biomedical Ethics Advisory Commission's proposal to ban the creation of a human being by somatic nuclear transplants. The Commission urged that such a ban should not deliberately or inadvertently interfere with biomedical research that is critical to the understanding and eventual prevention of human disease. To that end, we the undersigned endorse the ">statement on cloning from the American Society for Cell Biology . If legislation is deemed to be necessary, we respectfully urge you to ensure that it be limited to the cloning of human beings, and does not include language that impedes critical ongoing and potential new research. Sincerely, Sidney Altman
Harapan's Bookshelf: Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine Link Official Website of nobel Foundation Physiology or Medicine 1998, 1995. EDWARDB. LEWIS, CHRISTIANE N?SSLEINVOLHARD and eric F. wieschaus for their http://www.harapan.co.jp/english/e_books/E_B_nobel_med_e.htm
Extractions: last updated on Link: Official Website of Nobel Foundation: Physiology or Medicine Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro and Ferid Murad for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system STANLEY B. PRUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection PETER C. DOHERTY and ROLF M. ZINKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. EDWARD B. LEWIS CHRISTIANE NÜSSLEIN-VOLHARD and ERIC F. WIESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. ALFRED G. GILMAN and MARTIN RODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells. RICHARD J. ROBERTS
Premios Nobel De Fisiología Y Medicina Translate this page Premios nobel de Fisiología y Medicina. Año, Premiado, Pais, Campo de Estudio. 1995,Edward B. Lewis Christiane Nuesslein-Vohard eric F. wieschaus, http://www.revistamedica.8m.com/medmoder4.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. Premios Nobel de Fisiología y Medicina
Nobel Prizes Reflect The History Of Medical Research is a look at the exploration of new medical frontiers, as seen through the NobelPrize committee 1995 Edward B. Lewis and eric F. wieschaus, United States http://enquirer.com/editions/2002/10/09/tem_nobel_prizes_reflect.html
NPQ prepared in consultation with an extensive group of nobel prize winners Medicine,1982) John E. Walker (Chemistry, 1997) eric F. wieschaus (Physiology/Medicine http://www.digitalnpq.org/global_services/nobel laureates/12.07.01.html
Extractions: EDITOR'S NOTE: One hundred fifty Nobel Laureates will gather in Stockholm, Sweden, and Oslo, Norway, on Dec. 7 for an unprecedented celebration marking the 100th anniversary of the Nobel Prize. The prize winners in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and economics meet in Stockholm, where their prizes were awarded, and, correspondingly, the peace prize winners meet in Oslo. The more than 100 signatories to the attached statement have their own individual priorities in viewing the future, but all agree to this broad outline of the challenge facing humankind. Among scientists signing are Dr. Francis Crick (Physiology/Medicine, 1962), co-discoverer of the double-helix; Dr. Hans Bethe (Physics, 1967), discoverer of the source of the sun's energy; Dr. Charles Townes (Physics, 1964), co-discoverer of the laser, and Drs. Mario Molina (Chemistry, 1995) and Paul Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995), honored for their studies of the chemistry of the atmosphere and the ozone hole.