Kornberg, Arthur kornberg, arthur (1918 ) kornberg was born in New York and studied at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. He held senior appointments at http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/k/Kornberg/1.htm
Extractions: Kornberg, Arthur US biochemist. In 1956 he discovered the enzyme DNA-polymerase, which enabled molecules of the genetic material DNA to be synthesized for the first time. For this work he shared the 1959 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. By 1967 he had synthesized a biologically active artificial viral DNA. Kornberg was born in New York and studied at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. He held senior appointments at the Washington University School of Medicine (1953) and the Stamford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California (1959), before becoming head of the Biochemistry Department at Stamford. In 1957, Kornberg made an artificial DNA, but this turned out to lack genetic activity. He then tried to make a simpler one, the DNA of a virus known as Phi X174, which is single-stranded and in the form of a ring; its activity (infectivity) is lost if the ring is broken. In 1966 he discovered the enzyme needed to close the ring. When the synthetic DNA was added to a culture of bacteria cells, the cells abandoned their normal activity and started to produce Phi X174 viruses.
Kornberg, Arthur kornberg, arthur. A US biochemist who was coawared the Nobel Prize for discovering some of the enzymes responsible for DNA synthesis. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Reference/dictionary/Biologie/K/13.html
JBC -- Index By Author (Jul 1955; Volume 215, Number 1) Kaplan, Nathan O. Kaplan, Nathan O. Kimmel, JR King, Tsoo E. Korn, Edward D. Korn, Edward D. kornberg, arthur kornberg, arthur kornberg, arthur kornberg http://www.jbc.org/content/vol215/issue1/aindex.shtml
Extractions: Index by Author: 1 Jul 1955; 215 (1) [Table of Contents] A B C ... D E F G H I J K L M ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z Abendschein, Patricia A. Abrams, Adolph Ashmore, James Bernstein, I. A. Bishop, Jillian Borsook, Henry Bott, P. A. Boyer, P. D. Brown, Douglas M. Buston, H. W. Campbell, Mildred Cheldelin, Vernon H. Clark, Carroll T. Coon, Minor J. Cotzias, George C. D'angeli, F. Dannenberg, Arthur M., Jr. Dannenberg, Arthur M., Jr. de Garilhe, M. Privat Falcone, A. B. Fellig, Josef Finch, Clement A. Fritzson, Per Futterman, Sidney Gabrio, Beverly Wescott Greenfield, Robert E. Harrison, W. H. Hastings, A. Baird Hayaishi, Osamu Henderson, L. M. Hennessey, Marion Herranen, Ailene Hess, E. L. Johnson, B. Connor Kaplan, Nathan O. Kaplan, Nathan O. Kimmel, J. R. King, Tsoo E. Korn, Edward D. Korn, Edward D. Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Koski, Ruth E. Lambert, G. Frederick Lardy, Henry A. Laskowski, M. Lentz, Kenneth Levintow, Leon Li, Choh Hao Lieberman, Irving
JBC -- Index By Author (Feb 1950; Volume 182, Number 2) Kamen, Martin D. Karnofsky, David A. Keener, Harry A. Kelley, Barbara kornberg, arthur kornberg, arthur kornberg, arthur kornberg, arthur Krampitz, http://www.jbc.org/content/vol182/issue2/aindex.shtml
Extractions: Index by Author: 1 Feb 1950; 182 (2) [Table of Contents] A B C ... D E F G H I ... N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Allbritten, Frank F., Jr. Allen, Frank Worthington Bacher, James E. Bhattacharya, Gangagobinda Buka, R. Burstein, L. S. Carlson, C. W. Chaikoff, I. L. Chance, Britton Chance, Britton Clark, Ariel M. Cohen, Philip P. Colovos, Nicholas F. Combs, G. F. Day, Paul L. de Mello, R. Pimenta Finkel, Miriam P. Fodor, Paul J. Fodor, Paul J. Folk, B. P. Gibbon, John H., Jr. Gilbert, James B. Goldsmith, Grace A. Goldstein, Franz Greenstein, Jesse P. Greenstein, Jesse P. Greenstein, Jesse P. Grisolia, Santiago Haines, William J. Heuser, G. F. Hirsch, Gertrude M. Hoyer, Mary L. Iselin, Beat M. Johnson, Julius E. Josselyn, Dorothy Kamen, Martin D. Karnofsky, David A. Keener, Harry A. Kelley, Barbara Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Kornberg, Arthur Krampitz, Lester O. Kunkel, Henry G. Leavitt, Maxim Lilienthal, J. L., Jr. Mazur, Abraham McNutt, Walter S. Miller, R. F.
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AllRefer.com - Arthur Kornberg (Medicine, Biography) - Encyclopedia AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete information on arthur kornberg, Medicine, Biographies. Includes related research links. http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/K/Kornberg.html
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Arthur Kornberg Research Awards arthur kornberg, MD is a 1941 graduate of the School of Medicine and Dentistry and in 1959 won the Nobel Prize in Medicine. http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/research/kornberg.html
Extractions: Nobel Laureate Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Dr. Kornberg is a 1941 graduate of the University of Rochester's School of Medicine and Dentistry. After serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II, he returned to conduct research at the National Institutes of Health, NYU, Berkeley, and Washington University. Soon after he joined the faculty of Stanford University in 1959, he received the Nobel Prize in Medicine (with Dr. Severo Ochoa of New York University) for their discoveries of the mechanisms of the biologic synthesis of RNA and DNA. Dr. Kornberg has made significant contributions to our understanding of the mechanisms of inheritance and to the development of modern recombinant DNA technology. The Arthur Kornberg Research Awards were established in 1997 to recognize faculty in the School of Medicine and Dentistry for excellence in biomedical research. Thomas W. Clarkson, Ph.D.
Arthur Kornberg Medical Research Building The arthur kornberg Medical Research Building houses the Aab Institute of Biomedical Sciences, the centerpiece of a 10year, $400 million strategic plan to http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/Aab/mrb/
Extractions: Rochester Alzheimer's Disease Center recruitment of 50 additional scientists (including several of the world's foremost authorities in various fields) and erected a state-of-the-art, 225,000 square-foot research building on the Medical Center campus. By concentrating its resources on these six fields, the Medical Center will assemble a scientific powerhouse in each discipline that, with the exception of its research program in Cancer Biology, will be virtually unmatched in any other institution. Research laboratories in the Aab Institute of Biomedical Sciences feature state-of-the-art scientific equipment. The architectural signature of the new research building is the dramatic point on the west side, which houses the triangular break rooms on each floor. The purpose of these rooms is to foster interaction and the exchange of ideas among scientists in an informal, relaxed setting. "A Celebration of Scientific Discovery"
Kornberg, Arthur // (?.1918) , ? \\ . The summary for this Russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://www.americana.ru/k_amer/kornberg__arthur.htm
Arthur Kornberg Quotes - ThinkExist Quotations arthur kornberg quotes. Popularity arthur kornberg popularity 3/10. I Like this quote I dislike this quote A Submit a New arthur kornberg quote http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/arthur_kornberg/
Extractions: " A scientist shouldn't be asked to judge the economic and moral value of his work. All we should ask the scientist to do is find the truth-and then not keep it from anyone. " Arthur Kornberg quotes Similar Quotes . About: Scientists quotes Add to my book show_bar(221767,null,'a_scientist_shouldn-t_be_asked_to_judge_the') Submit a New Arthur Kornberg quote Arthur Koestler quotes Arthur Lee quotes
Biochemistry 321 Biblio kornberg, arthur (1987) Biochemistry (Perspectives) 26, 68886891. kornberg, arthur (1992) News and Features of unknown Journal 6, 3143-3145. http://employees.csbsju.edu/hjakubowski/classes/ch331public/bchm321biblio.html
Extractions: Dr. Henry Jakubowski Navigation Biochemistry BCHM 321: Home Page Course Information Course Web Material General Bibliography ... Internet Resources [ Biochemistry at CSB/SJU ] Search Home Contact References Recent New Hints into the Biological Basis of Autism. Science. 294, pg 34 (2001) Biologists Join the Dots (Quantum). Nature. 413, pg 450 (2001) A Molecular Whodunit (Influenza Pandemic). Science. 293. pg 1773, 1776 (2001) Testing Telomerase. Nature. 413, pg 370 (2001) Orgel. A simpler nucleic acid (origin of life) Science. 290, pg 1306 (2000) Lusis. Atherosclerosis (a review) Nature. 407. pg 233 (2000) Mangelsdorf et al. New Ways to Lower Cholesterol . Science. 289. pg 1446 (2000) Garcia et al. The Cholesterol Quartet. Science. 292. pg 1310, 1394 (2001) Fuentes-Prior et al. Structural basis for the anticoagulant activity of the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. Nature. 404, pg 449, 518 (2000) Dennis et al. Peptide exosite inhibitors of factor VIIA as anticoagulants. Nature. 404, pg 449, 465 (2000) Okamoto et al. A cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitor attenuates atherosclerosis in rabbits. Nature. 406, pg 203 (2000)
Arthur Kornberg Quotes 1 quotes and quotations by arthur kornberg. arthur kornberg Quotes. A scientist shouldn t be asked to judge the economic and moral value of his work. http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/a/arthur_kornberg.html
Extractions: " a classic in science" "Together, the authors have created a text that should become a classic in science. DNA Replication is much more than a summary of the field: it is an excellent reference book on DNA and nucleic-acid enzymes, and every molecular laboratory should have a copy for easy access to the principles underlying today's DNA technology...The book is an excellent resource for graduate teaching and should also be a useful source of background material for undergraduate courses in biochemistry...In areas that I know best, I was impressed by the accuracy of the information and the thoughtfulness of the discussions."
Extractions: Hugh D'Andrade This candid narrative by Nobel laureate, Arthur Kornberg, chronicles the saga of a small biotech start-up, the key players, the painstaking development of the pe rfect product, and the forces affecting its resulting success or failure. Kornberg's razor-sharp wit and provocative opinions make this book a compelling page turner, whether he is decrying the current fashion in scientific funding or delving into the hotly contested PCR patent trial. About the Author:
Washington University In St. Louis Magazine Their lab also furthered the research of arthur kornberg, Severo Ochoa, and Luis F. Leloirall Nobel laureatesas well as William H. Danforth, http://magazine.wustl.edu/Summer03/BringingDistinction.html
Extractions: Bringing Distinction and Honor to the University Over the years, 22 Nobel laureates have been associated with Washington University. Many served as distinguished faculty members while doing their award-winning work; some were graduate students; and one was the grandson of a University co-founder. By C.B. Adams W hen a place like Washington University dedicates itself to fostering vibrant and vital academic, creative, and scientific endeavors, the resulting work is sure to garner attention. And when an institution like the Nobel Foundation recognizes world-class accomplishments in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature, economic sciences, and peace, the name Washington University is sure to appear regularly. That is exactly what has happened. In a world that seems to have an award for virtually any accomplishment, from the sublime to the silly, the Nobel Prize stands above and apart. Its high standards for selection make it the gold standard. That is why the number of Nobel laureates a university has nurtured is one way to measure its own academic standing. In 1967, an article in