[ISI Highly Cited Researchers Version 1.1] Highly Cited Researcher milstein, César. Home Browse Results Biography milstein, César portrait. Contact Information. Telephone. Fax Number http://hcr3.isiknowledge.com/author.cgi?&link1=Browse&link2=Results&id=1997
César Milstein Translate this page Apellido y Nombres, milstein, César. Nacimiento, 8 de octubre de 1927, Bahía Blanca.Nacionalidad, Argentino - Británico http://www.universia.com.ar/multimedia/minisites/premios_nobel/milstein_ficha.ht
César Milstein Translate this page en Cambridge a los 75 años ya raíz de una enfermedad cardíaca. Ver en UniversiaLa ciencia de luto falleció César milstein, el último Nobel argentino http://www.universia.com.ar/multimedia/minisites/premios_nobel/milstein_biografi
Extractions: Se graduó de Químico en la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas de la UBA, a los 25 años de edad. Cinco años más tarde, fue nombrado por concurso en el Instituto Nacional de Microbiología "Carlos Malbrán", que gozaba de prestigio mundial. Al poco tiempo, partió hacia Cambridge, Inglaterra, becado por el laboratorio que dirigía otro Premio Nobel, el Dr. Frederick Sanger, en el Medical Center Research.
César Milstein, The Father Of Modern Immunology - Nature Immunology In memoriam César milstein, who with the late Georges Köhler invented Celia and César milstein, with Tim and Noah Springer, in front of the Fogg Art http://www.nature.com/ni/journal/v3/n6/full/ni0602-501.html
Extractions: @import "/ni/style.css"; nature.com homepage Login Search This journal All of nature.com Advanced search Journal home Archive Table of Contents ... For librarians NPG Resources Nature Nature Reviews Immunology Nature Medicine Nature Cell Biology ... Browse all publications Commentary Nature Immunology Milstein first approached this problem by determining the sequence of disulfide-bonded peptides in Bence-Jones light chains and obtained evidence for both variable and constant sequences. Milstein also defined the inter-heavy chain disulfide bridges that characterize each immunoglobulin (Ig) subclass. Milstein became an advocate of somatic mutation and, with Sydney Brenner, published a paper on this topic in 1966. As is often the case, the advocates of the opposing schools of germline diversity and somatic mutation both turned out to be right, with a combined mechanism far more complex than imagined by anyone. With David Secher and Richard Cotton, Milstein searched for somatic mutations in the cultured cells. This required both prolonged culture to allow mutations to accumulate and the screening of thousands of clones. The first examples of mutations in somatic cells were identified, but the mutations were not in the variable region and thus were not the type sought.
Extractions: @import "/ni/style.css"; nature.com homepage Login Search This journal All of nature.com Advanced search Journal home Archive Table of Contents ... For librarians NPG Resources Nature Nature Reviews Immunology Nature Medicine Nature Cell Biology ... Browse all publications Commentary Nature Immunology
César Milstein (1926-2002) Translate this page César nació en Bahía Blanca, Argentina, en el hogar del emigrante ucraniano El Dr milstein, fue honrado con múltiples distinciones en todo el mundo, http://www.compumedicina.com/historia/hm_010802.htm
Extractions: César nació en Bahía Blanca, Argentina, en el hogar del emigrante ucraniano Lázaro Milstein y de su esposa Máxima, una maestra hija también de inmigrantes. César fue uno de tres hijos, comenzó sus estudios en su ciudad natal y al terminar el bachillerato viajó a la Capital en donde se matriculó en 1945 en la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales de la Universidad de Buenos Aires. En 1956 presentó su tesis sobre estudios cinéticos con la enzima aldehído dehidrogenasa, recibió su doctorado en Quimica y ganó el concurso para trabajar en el Instituto Nacional de Microbiologia Malbrán. Al año siguiente recibió una beca y viajó a Cambridge para perfeccionar sus estudios. Regresó a Buenos Aires en 1961 y fue nombrado Jefe del Departamento de Biología Molecular del Instituto Malbrán. Debido a factores políticos, regresó a Cambridge en donde modificó sus investigaciones de enzimología a inmunología y empezó sus trabajos para desarrollar los anticuerpos monoclonales, uno de los factores inmunológicos mas importantes en la investigación de muchas enfermedades.
Sociedad Española De Inmunología Translate this page César milstein and the spanish science a close relationship César milsteinExtracts from an interview with David Secher in 1999 http://www.inmunologia.org/congresos/ver_congreso.htm?id=16
Argentina: Como Somos Translate this page El Sur del Sur WEB SITE Como Somos. LOS ARGENTINOS EN EL EXTERIOR Fuga de CerebrosBiografía de César milstein César milstein nació en Bahía Blanca, http://www.surdelsur.com/somos/fuga/f_milste.htm
César Milstein (1927-), Molecular Biologist National Portrait Gallery, list of portraits for César milstein including Césarmilstein by Nick Sinclair, http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?LinkID=mp06521
César Milstein 1927-2002 Nobel Scientist Dr César Milstein, Who Dr César milstein was born in Bahia Blanca, Argentina, in 1927. In a 1975paper in Nature, César milstein and Georges Köhler described how they had http://www.mrc.ac.uk/index/public-interest/public-cesar_milstein.htm
Extractions: Professor Sir George Radda, Chief Executive of the Medical Research Council (MRC), said: "The discovery of monoclonal antibodies revolutionised biomedical research and sparked an international billion-pound biotechnology industry. No other MRC scientist has made such an outstanding contribution to Britain's science, health and wealth creation. He returned to Argentina for two years, but political persecution of liberal intellectuals and scientists, and a vendetta against the director of the institute where he was working, forced him to resign. He returned to Cambridge and rejoined Sanger, who was now Head of the Division of Protein Chemistry in the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology. He followed Sanger's advice and changed his field of study from enzymes to antibodies.
Extractions: Fri Mar 29 16:38:27 2002 His work has influenced OB/GYN http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/26/obituaries/26MILS.html March 26, 2002 César Milstein, 74, Winner of Nobel Prize in Medicine, Dies By KENNETH CHANG Dr. César Milstein, who shared the 1984 Nobel Prize in Medicine for a revolutionary technique to produce antibodies that latch onto specific proteins, died on Sunday in Cambridge, England. He was 74. The cause was a heart ailment, according to the laboratory at Cambridge University where he spent most of his career. In 1975, Dr. Milstein and Dr. Georges Köhler, a postdoctoral fellow of his at Cambridge, invented a method of forcing immune system cells to produce one particular type of antibody. Usually, the body's defense system generates a profusion of different antibodies to kill invading bacteria and viruses. Dr. Milstein and Dr. Köhler's research on pure antibodies, known as monoclonal antibodies, provided an important cornerstone in molecular biology research.
Extractions: Sat Mar 30 15:24:47 2002 As a fellow Argentinian Jewish doctor, I am proud of Dr. Milstein and mourn his passing. Hugo D. Ribot M.D., FACOG Cartersville, GA Private Practice since 1990 2 MDs/3 CNMs use when must restrict search to only the ob-gyn-l forum... Enter search keywords: Returns per screen: Require all keywords: Return to Mail a New Message to the Forum: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net Last Updated: Fri Sep 2 05:08:49 2005 The American Medical Association is no longer designating CME hours for AMA Category II CME credit. However, physicians themselves may self designate learning activities as Category II CME credit hours if they feel it is of sufficient educational merit and meets the formal definitions of continuing medical education. OBGYN.net believes these interaction in this forum meets these criteria. For further information
Latino Heritage Museum César milstein Argentina In work with his colaureate Georges JF Koehler, milsteindeveloped the techniques for producing monoclonal antibodies, http://www.latinoheritage101.com/pages/4/page4.html?refresh=1113297867817
Blackwell Synergy - Cookie Absent César milstein (1927 2002). Göran Möller. César milstein, Cambridge, Englandwas awarded the Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1984 for the http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.0300-9475.2002.00001.x
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Monoclonal Antibody milstein, César César milstein, a molecular biologist and winner of the 1984Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. This photograph was taken in the http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0022166.html
Extractions: Antibody produced by fusing an antibody-producing lymphocyte (white blood cell) with a cancerous myeloma (bone-marrow) cell. The resulting fused cell, called a hybridoma, is immortal and can be used to produce large quantities of a single, specific antibody. By choosing antibodies that are directed against antigens found on cancer cells, and combining them with cytotoxic drugs, it is hoped to make so-called magic bullets that will be able to pick out and kill cancers.