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  1. Nestlé: Kaspar Villiger, Nestlé Boycott, Menier Chocolate, Nestlé Purina Petcare, Powwow Water, Edward George, Baron George, Günter Blobel
  2. Cell Biologist Dr. Gunter Blobel, Nobel Laureate on how cells work.: An article from: International Journal of Humanities and Peace by Jane Everhart, 2001-01-01
  3. Ehrensenator Der Technischen Universität Dresden: Hans Bredow, Günther Landgraf, Günter Blobel, Otto Buchwitz, Achim Mehlhorn (German Edition)
  4. People From Zagan County: People From Zagan, Adolf Engler, Günter Blobel, Lukasz Gargula, Constantine, Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen
  5. Hochschullehrer (Rockefeller University): Karl Landsteiner, Abraham Pais, Frederick Seitz, Roderick MacKinnon, Günter Blobel, Saul Aaron Kripke (German Edition)
  6. TRANSFER OF PROTEINS ACROSS MEMBRANES. Parts I & II. by Gunter and Bernhard Dobberstein. Dr. Blobel is a Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology. BLOBEL, 1975
  7. FUNCTIONAL INTERACTION OF PLANT RIBOSOMES WITH ANIMAL MICROSOMAL MEMBRANES. by Bernhard and Gunter Blobel. Dr. Blobel is a Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology. DOBBERSTEIN, 1977
  8. Grandes pequeños descubrimientos.(análisis)(TT: Great little discoveries.)(TA: analysis): An article from: Siempre! by René Anaya, 1999-11-04

41. Gunter Blobel Biography
gunter blobel biography and related resources. gunter blobel (born May 21,1936) is a biologist. blobel was born in Waltersdorf, Germany.
http://www.biographybase.com/biography/Blobel_Gunter.html
Biography Base Home Link To Us Search Biographies: Browse Biographies A B C D ... Z Gunter Blobel Biography Gunter Blobel (born May 21, 1936) is a biologist.
Blobel was born in Waltersdorf, Germany. He graduated at the University of Tübingen in 1960. He was appointed to the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in 1986.
Blobel was awarded the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery that newly synthesized proteins contain "address tags" which direct them to the proper location within the cell. This is known as protein targeting.
As of 2003, Blobel works at the Rockefeller University, New York.
Scientific Awards
1978: National Academy of Sciences' U.S. Steel Foundation Award in Molecular Biology
1982: Gairdner Foundation International Award
1993: Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award
1995: Ciba Drew Award in Biomedical Research
1996: King Faisal Award
1997: Mayor's Award for Excellence in Science and Technology 1999: Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Gunter Blobel Resources Contact Us Sitemap This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License . It uses material from the Wikipedia article Gunter Blobel

42. GlycoInformation.info
gunter blobel is the winner of the 1999 Nobel Prize for Physiology for thediscovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and
http://www.glycoinformation.info/nobel.html
Four of the last eight Nobel Prizes for medicine have dealt with the cellular communication process and its importance to our wellness. Gunter Blobel is the winner of the 1999 Nobel Prize for Physiology for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell.
Gunter Blobel, M.D., Ph.D.
Investigator, Rockefeller University Click here for a slide presentation presented by the Nobel E-Museum on Dr. Blobel's work.
Click here
for a transcript of the PBS interview with Dr. Blobel. Summary
A large number of proteins carrying out essential functions are constantly being made within our cells. These proteins have to be transported either out of the cell, or to the different compartments - the organelles - within the cell. How are newly made proteins transported across the membrane surrounding the organelles, and how are they directed to their correct location?
These questions have been answered through the work of this year’s Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, Dr Günter Blobel, a cell and molecular biologist at the Rockefeller University in New York. Already at the beginning of the 1970s he discovered that newly synthesized proteins have an intrinsic signal that is essential for governing them to and across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, one of the cell’s organelles. During the next twenty years Blobel characterized in detail the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes. He also showed that similar "address tags", or "zip codes", direct proteins to other intracellular organelles.

43. Reflected Glow
Junona Moroianu (Biology), last week s news that gunter blobel had won the NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine was met with more than professional
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/rvp/pubaf/chronicle/v8/o28/moroianu.html
Reflected Glow
BC biologist is protege of recent Nobel Prize winner
For Asst. Prof. Junona Moroianu (Biology), last week's news that Gunter Blobel had won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was met with more than professional interest. Moroianu worked with Blobel in his laboratory for three years during her doctorate and post-doctorate training. "Gunter is one of the brilliant biologists of the century and I was very fortunate to work in his lab," said Moroianu, who paid a congratulatory visit to her mentor at Rockefeller University shortly after the award was announced. Blobel, Moroianu said, revolutionized the study of cell biology when he hypothesized and proved that proteins have intrinsic signals that guide them from their formation in a cell's cytoplasm to a specific destination within the cell. Her own work in an off-shoot of Blobel's. Moroianu is working under an American Cancer Society grant to determine how macromolecules of human papillomaviruses, which are strongly associated with cervical cancer, enter and exit the nuclei of human cells. Moroianu said she was drawn to BC by the opportunity to design her own lab in the renovated Higgins Hall and the sense of community at BC. "You feel like science matters here," she said, "that this is a good place to do good science."

44. LookSmart - Directory - Blobel, Gunter
blobel, gunter Read about the Nobel Prize winner whose discoveries shed Browse an announcement released when gunter blobel received an award from the
http://search.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317914/us10233894/us330279/us562475/
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Blobel, Gunter - Read about the Nobel Prize winner whose discoveries shed light on diseases such as cystic fibrosis.
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  • Blobel, Guenter - Rockefeller University Biography
    Read through a biography of Guenter Blobel, a cell biologist at Rockefeller University and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
    Blobel, Gunter - Academic Paper

    Peruse an academic paper on intracellular protein traffic by the Nobel Prize winner, or link to his homepage.
    Blobel, Gunter - Excellence in Science Award

    Browse an announcement released when Gunter Blobel received an award from the Mayor of New York for excellence in science and technology.
    Blobel, Gunter - Holtzman Lecture

    Find a transcript from the 1999 Holtzman Memorial Lecture, given by Dr. Gunter Blobel.
    Blobel, Gunter - Laboratory Homepage
  • 45. Ãþíòåð Áëîáåëü (Gunter Blobel)
    The summary for this Russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
    http://www.peoples.ru/science/biology/blobel/
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  • 46. BBC News | Health | Cell Discovery Wins Nobel Medicine Prize
    Dr gunter blobel has won the Nobel Prize for Medicine Dr Guenter blobel ofRockefeller University image Dr gunter blobel s work has major implications
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_471000/471388.stm

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    Wednesday, October 13, 1999 Published at 10:36 GMT 11:36 UK
    Health
    Cell discovery wins Nobel medicine prize

    Dr Gunter Blobel has won the Nobel Prize for Medicine
    Dr Guenter Blobel of Rockefeller University in New York has been awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine for his research on proteins that could lead to new treatments for hereditary diseases. The Swedish academy praised Dr Blobel for discovering how proteins are transported within the human cell, work that could help to unlock the secrets of diseases such as cystic fibrosis. Dr Guenter Blobel likens the signalling system to a postal service The Nobel Prize Committee said the discovery "has had an immense impact on modern cell biological research". In a statement, the committee said: "Dr Blobel's research has helped explain the molecular mechanism behind several genetic diseases. The Daily Telegraph's Science Correspondent Roger Highfield puts the work in context ... "One example is the hereditary disease primary hyperoxaluria, which causes kidney stones at an early age. Dr Gunter Blobel's work has major implications "In some forms of familial hypercholesterolemia, a very high level of cholesterol in the blood is due to deficient transport signals.

    47. Creation Of Man - HARUN YAHYA
    but in 1999, only gunter blobel took the award for his discovery of the zip In an interview done after he received the award, Professor blobel said
    http://www.creationofman.net/chapter3/chapter3_23.html
    the miracle of the hormones The SRP Structure: The Guide in the Cell
    Imagine that you are visiting a country for a very short time and that you do not know the language spoken in that country. In this situation, you will urgently need the services of a guide. Similarly, SRP acts as a guide for newly produced proteins. Imagine that you are making a very short visit to a foreign country whose language you do not know. In this situation you urgently need a guide that will both allow you to communicate with the local people and help you with your visit without getting lost. Similarly, there is a particle in cells that acts as a guide for newly formed proteins. This guide is the SRP mentioned above whose complex structure is composed of protein and RNS molecules. On the exterior it resembles a bowling pin only 0.000000024 meter in size. SRP understands the language both of proteins and of the receptor-entrance channel complex on the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum. The complicated structure of this guide is not yet completely understood; scientists suspect that the RNA molecule in the SRP has an important role, but they have not been able to understand the function of this molecule yet. Moreover, the intricacies of the relation between the SRP guide and the receptor-entrance channel are still unknown.

    48. Creation Of Man - HARUN YAHYA
    52 gunter blobel, Intracellular Protein Traffic, 2000, 55 Howard HughesMedical Institute, gunter blobel Wins 1999 Nobel Prize for Physiology or
    http://www.creationofman.net/chapter3/chapter3_22.html
    the miracle of the hormones The zip code system within cells
    The structure of the cell A cell, with all its organelles that act in perfect harmony and order within it, has amazing characteristics. Professors at the Swedish Karolinska Institute said that the organization of a cell can be compared to that of a big city such as New York. When we investigate proteins, which are the building blocks of a cell, we discover some important facts: Every cell contains over a billion or so protein molecules consisting of thousands of different kinds. They are reconstituted as a result of the complex operations described by the term "protein synthesis." Some of them are composed as enzymes and are present in nearly every stage of all the complex reactions in the cell; some of them form messenger hormones; some assume special duties in the organization of vital functions, such as carrying oxygen to the blood, stimulating the cells to action and adjusting the level of sugar in the body.

    49. The Echo Foundation
    PhotoReflect.com Home PhotoReflect.com Home. blobel Dialogue Day gunter blobelvisits Myers Park Photographs (c) Donna Bise 02/28/2005. show more options
    http://www.photoreflect.com/scripts/prsm.dll?eventthumbs?event=0ACN0009

    50. University Diaries
    UD SALUTES gunter blobel. UD recalls sitting, about ten years ago, at atalk given by a way obtuse Freudian English professor who taught at Hopkins.
    http://margaretsoltan.phenominet.com/2004/12/ud-salutes.html
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    Wednesday, December 08, 2004
    UD SALUTES...
    GUNTER BLOBEL
    UD recalls sitting, about ten years ago, at a talk given by a way obtuse Freudian English professor who taught at Hopkins. After his enigmatic performance, a graduate student in the audience wondered why he could not have been - many English professors could not seem to be - more clear in the use of the English language.
    With a haughty impatience conveying barely-suppressed rage, the Freudian said: "Would you ask an advanced cellular biologist to reduce his research in that way? A physicist? Some fields of endeavor are complex."
    Of course UD had heard versions of this defense of linguistic hebephrenia many times in similar settings; she had heard a student of Paul de Man's reject with contempt any notion that de Man had been a "fascist," since anyone stupid enough to think you could deploy such simple terms as "fascist," or "socialist" or "democrat" without deconstructing their authoritarian claims to truth was beneath consideration.
    UD knows there are still graduate students and professors impressed and even intimidated by this line of argument, and, in simple English, she finds it sad.

    51. October 15, 1999, Hour One: Nobel Roundup
    gunter blobel, a cell biologist at New York s Rockefeller University, was awardedthe prize gunter blobel 1999 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine
    http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/1999/Oct/hour1_101599.html
    THIS WEEK ON
    SCIENCE FRIDAY... Science Friday Archives October
    Hour One : Nobel Roundup
    This week, an annual rite of fall took place. (No, not Columbus Day!) Early in the morning on Monday and Tuesday, several innocent, unassuming scientists were awoken by a telephone call from Sweden. And for a brief time after that call, those scientists enjoyed a little peace and quiet before the Nobel Prize winners were announced publicly, and a deluge of attention began. Gunter Blobel, a cell biologist at New York's Rockefeller University, was awarded the prize for Physiology or Medicine. His work focuses on working to understand cellular "trafficking" how proteins make their way through membranes surrounding the interior parts of a cell and how cells know where to deliver a protein within the cell. Blobel discovered that each protein contains a signal (often described as an "address" or a "ZIP code") that helps guide the protein across membranes - and that makes sure that proteins intended for the mitochondria doesn't get dropped off in the nucleus instead. His work is thought to have potential for helping treat diseases in which proteins don't get correctly handled by the body. We'll talk to him and find out more.

    52. Günter Blobel - Wikipedia, Wolna Encyklopedia
    (Przekierowano z gunter blobel). Günter blobel (ur. 21 maja 1936 w Waltersdorfna Slasku, obecnie Niegoslawice), biolog niemiecki, laureat Nagrody Nobla
    http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunter_Blobel
    G¼nter Blobel
    Z Wikipedii, wolnej encyklopedii.
    (Przekierowano z Gunter Blobel G¼nter Blobel (ur. 21 maja w Waltersdorf na Śląsku , obecnie Niegosławice), biolog niemiecki , laureat Nagrody Nobla W wyjechał do USA , od profesor Uniwersytetu Rockefellera w Nowym Jorku . Kierował przy tej uczelni Laboratory of Cell Biology. Prowadził badania nad transportem cząsteczek białek przez błony wewnątrzkom³rkowe. Był wsp³Å‚autorem teorii (tzw. hipoteza sygnałowa) głoszącej, że każde nowo powstałe białko ma na jednym końcu dodatkową, kr³tką sekwencję aminokwas³w (peptyd sygnałowy), umożliwiającą mu przemieszczenie się przez błonę. Prace Blobela przyczyniły się do zrozumienia mechanizmu niekt³rych chor³b dziedzicznych oraz produkcji nowych lek³w. W został wyr³Å¼niony Nagrodą Nobla za badania nad mechanizmem i identyfikacją wewnętrznych sygnał³w kierujących transportem i lokalizacją białek w kom³rkach. Fundusze otrzymane z nagrody przeznaczył na sfinansowanie odbudowy kościoła Maryi Panny w Dreźnie i synagogi drezdeńskiej.

    53. Medizin-Nobelpreis An Geburtigen Deutschen Gunter Blobel
    Translate this page Beide lieben klassische Musik, gunter blobel vor allem Mozart und Bach. Fur denZellbiologen blobel ist der Preis ein Meilenstein seiner 45 Jahre langen
    http://www.gene.ch/genpost/1999/Jul-Dec/msg00078.html
    GENPOST Archiv [Index] [Thread]
    Medizin-Nobelpreis an geburtigen Deutschen Gunter Blobel

    54. Medizin-Nobelpreis An Geburtigen Deutschen Gunter Blobel

    http://www.gene.ch/genpost/1999/Jul-Dec/msg00079.html
    GENPOST Archiv [Index] [Thread]
    Medizin-Nobelpreis an geburtigen Deutschen Gunter Blobel

    55. Sidebar: Günter Blobel PhD'67
    gunter blobel Günter blobel PhD 67. Günter blobel PhD 67 won the 1999 Nobel Prizein Medicine in October for discovering that proteins carry signals that
    http://www.uwalumni.com/onwisconsin/Spring00/blobel.html

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    A native German cellular and molecular biologist who became a U.S. citizen in the eighties, Blobel currently heads the laboratory of cell biology at Rockefeller University in Manhattan. He also worked in the UW's McArdle Laboratory for Cancer Research while earning his doctorate in oncology at Madison. Blobel's research has had an enormous impact on studies of the cell and has helped to explain what goes awry during such genetic diseases as cystic fibrosis. Archives Media Kit
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    56. Richard Lounsbery Foundation
    together with gunter blobel, of the signal hypothesis . 5. G. blobel andDD Sabatini. (1971) Ribosomemembrane interactions in eukaryotic cells.
    http://rlounsbery.org/officers_board/bios/Sabatini.html
    Home Mission History Contact Us ... Login DAVID D. SABATINI, M.D., Ph.D.
    CHAIRMAN AND PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF CELL BIOLOGY CITATION OF MOST IMPORTANT ACCOMPLISHMENT:
    David Sabatini provided the initial evidence that led to his formulation, together with Gunter Blobel, of the "signal hypothesis". His work opened the field of intracellular protein trafficking, to which he made numerous contributions, including his discovery of the polarized budding of viruses in epithelial cells. STATEMENT:
    SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY:
    1. D.D. Sabatini, K. Bensch, and R. Barrnett. (1963) Cytochemistry and electron microscopy. The preservation of cellular ultrastructure and enzymatic activity by aldehyde fixation . J. Cell Biol 2. D.D. Sabatini, Y. Tashiro, and G.E. Palade. (1966) On the attachment of ribosomes to microsomal membranes. J. Mol. Biol 3. C. Redman and D.D. Sabatini. (1966) Vectorial discharge of peptides released by puromycin from attached ribosomes. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 4. D.D. Sabatini and G. Blobel. (1970) Controlled proteolysis of nascent polypeptides in rat liver cell fractions. II. Location of the polypeptides in rough microsomes. J. Cell Biol.

    57. Medibolics
    For instance, it will include the words of Dr. gunter blobel, the 1999 NobelPrize winner in Statement From 1999 Nobel Prize Winner, Dr. gunter blobel,
    http://www.medibolics.com/FoodgrowntypeCoQ10.htm
    Food-Grown-Type Co-Q10 HIV Nutrient Supplementation: Should I Use "Food-Grown-Type" Co-Q10?
    By Michael Mooney, December, 2002 Question:
    I have read your How To Manage Side Effects Guide Definition of terms:
    Answer:
    So-called "food-grown-type" nutrients are controversial. Companies that market them generally claim that they have significantly better absorption and utilization in the body than the pure isolated USP-type nutrients that are contained in the majority of dietary supplement products. Some studies of "food-grown-type" nutrients have been conducted, but all of the available published studies were funded by "food-grown-type" nutrient manufacturers and conducted by one paid researcher, so none of them are independent.

    58. ACS :: Another ACS Grantee Wins Nobel Prize
    gunter blobel, MD, PhD, the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Professor of Cell Biology atthe Rockefeller University in New York, has won the 1999 Nobel Prize in
    http://www.cancer.org/docroot/NWS/content/NWS_5_1x_Another_ACS_Grantee_Wins_Nobe
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    Gunter Blobel, MD, PhD, the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Professor of Cell Biology at the Rockefeller University in New York, has won the 1999 Nobel Prize in medicine and physiology. The American Cancer Society (ACS) supports scientists and researchers early in their careers, when funding is oft... ACS News Center Medical Updates News You Can Use Stories of Hope ... I Want to Help You can help in the fight against cancer. Donate and volunteer. It's easy and fun! Learn more Another ACS Grantee Wins Nobel Prize Another ACS Grantee Wins Nobel Prize Article date: Gunter Blobel, MD, PhD, the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Professor of Cell Biology at the Rockefeller University in New York, has won the 1999 Nobel Prize in medicine and physiology. The American Cancer Society (ACS) supports scientists and researchers early in their careers, when funding is often hard to find. Dr. Blobel is the 30th such ACS grantee to win the Nobel Prize. For 30 years, Dr. Blobel and his colleagues have worked to prove the existence of programmed steps that allow molecules to move from one part of a cell to another, and be directed to their proper location. Knowledge of how normal cells function is important to the understanding of what goes wrong in cancerous or other abnormal cells.

    59. Singapore Science Centre Resources Scientists Awards Nobel
    Professor gunter blobel Howard Hughes Medical Institute 1230 York Avenue, NewYork, NY 10021 USA Affiliation Laboratory of Cell Biology, The Rockefeller
    http://www.science.edu.sg/ssc/detailed.jsp?artid=3644&type=4&root=142&parent=142

    60. Consulate General Of Sweden - 2005 Winner, Medicine
    gunter blobel, 1999 Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology/Medicine and Pioneer in Dr. Michl told his young student about his good friend, gunter blobel,
    http://www.swedenabroad.com/pages/general____36388.asp
    Svenska Thursday 15 Sep 2005 7:11 AM GMT +1 Home Contact us Sweden Abroad Sweden.se Navigation The Consulate General
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    Print version 2005 Grand Prize Recipient, Medicine Michael Vishnevetsky Midwood High School, Brooklyn Gunter Blobel, 1999 Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology/Medicine and Pioneer in Protein Targeting Within/out of the Cell
    Michael Vishnevetsky is no stranger to science and scientists. His great grandfather was a chemical engineer and his grandfather was also an engineer. Both of his parents were born in the Ukraine, and after his mother immigrated to the U.S. at the age of 13, she attended Long Island University and became a pharmacist. He says that his family has been a tremendous source of love and support for him.
    "My entire family has served as an inspiration to me – they overcame the oppression of the anti-Semitic communist government, and they have thrived in this great country," he said.
    Michael says "his insatiable curiosity and will to learn" led him to concentrate in the sciences. His interest in medicine led him to volunteer at Coney Island Hospital since his freshman year. "I have been a VNA (Volunteer Nurse Aid), and taken part in many of the spectacular courses that the staff offers there," he said, mentioning pediatrics, heart physiology, CPR/First Aid, and the operating room. His knowledge of Russian also helped him serve as translator between Russian patients and doctors.
    To indulge what he calls his "scientific appetite," he enjoys studying astrophysics in his spare time. In the 9th and 10th grades, he won prizes for his elaborate science fair projects. Last summer, he took an introductory biology course at Harvard University’s Secondary School Program. Surrounded by college students, he felt "amazed by all that I had learned."

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