Library And Archival Exhibitions On The Web Title, martin rodbell Discovering How Cells Respond to Signals Subjects,rodbell, martin ; Scientists ; Nobel Prize ; Medicine ; Scientific http://www.sil.si.edu/SILPublications/Online-Exhibitions/CF/oe_display_instituti
GK- National Network Of Education rodbell, martin, 1994. Gilman, Alfred G. 1994. NussleinVolhard, Christiane,1995. Lewis, Edward B. 1995. Wieschaus, Eric F. 1995. Doherty, Peter C. 1996 http://www.indiaeducation.info/infomine/nobel/nobelarchive.htm
Extractions: Chemistry Literature Medicine Peace ... Economics Chemistry Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Sabatier, Paul Grignard, Victor Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William
The Battle Of Darkness & Light According to The martin rodbell Papers Signal Transduction and the Discovery of rodbell, martin, Signal Transduction Evolution of an Idea. http://www.serendipity.li/more/battle.htm
Extractions: It was due to my growing concerns about our country's growing health problems as well as the erosion of our civil liberties that, in November of 2002, I published a paper focusing upon both of these issues and spoke about them on several radio programs. The paper quietly made its way through Washington, D.C., and then around the world. The paper detailed the "revolving door" in Washington, D.C., an apparent turnstile between private industries and the United States government. Through this invisible door, industry managers pass directly into the very agencies that govern industry the government's food, drug, agricultural and chemical regulatory departments in order to influence regulations or speed the approval of their company's products. The paper, "Let Them Eat Anything," showed this unholy alliance, the conflict of interest that has contributed to a mounting epidemic of health problems in the United States. (1) I expected the paper to provoke comments, but I did not expect it to result in my being contacted by a nutrition expert who had worked in the USDA. She called to thank me for writing the paper. Incredibly, because light was the topic of my previous book detailing a personal Near Death Experience and ongoing, unexplained encounters with light phenomena, in an example of incomparable synchronicity, the name of the former USDA expert who contacted me was Luise Light. I read the first email I received from Luise Light with a sense of astonishment. Luise had been the former team leader and Special Nutrition Assistant to USDA's Carol Tucker Foreman who is described as "a prominent food safety advocate" by Eric Schlosser in his best-selling book, Fast Food Nation.
East Carolina University rodbell, martin 1994 1995 Rodenbough, Grace Taylor 1967 RodeosJohnston County1997 Rodgers, Eric Winfred 1994 Rodriguez, Marc Antonio 1997 http://www.lib.ecu.edu/NCCollPCC/rclip.html
The Battle Of Darkness And Light According to The martin rodbell Papers Signal Transduction and the Discovery of rodbell, martin, Signal Transduction Evolution of an Idea. http://www.rense.com/general45/bll.htm
Extractions: It was due to my growing concerns about our country's growing health problems as well as the erosion of our civil liberties that, in November of 2002, I published a paper focusing upon both of these issues and spoke about them on several radio programs. The paper quietly made its way through Washington, D.C., and then around the world. The paper detailed the "revolving door" in Washington, D.C., an apparent turnstile between private industries and the United States government. Through this invisible door, industry managers pass directly into the very agencies that govern industry - the government's food, drug, agricultural and chemical regulatory departments - in order to influence regulations or speed the approval of their company's products. The paper, "Let Them Eat Anything," showed this unholy alliance, the conflict of interest that has contributed to a mounting epidemic of health problems in the United States. (1) I expected the paper to provoke comments, but I did not expect it to result in my being contacted by a nutrition expert who had worked in the USDA. She called to thank me for writing the paper. Incredibly, because light was the topic of my previous book detailing a personal Near Death Experience and ongoing, unexplained encounters with light phenomena, in an example of incomparable synchronicity, the name of the former USDA expert who contacted me was Luise Light.
Mendel Newsletter N.s. 10 (February 2001) Reid, Bryony 2003; rodbell, martin 2001; Schloegel, Judy Johns 1996;Scripps Institution of Oceanography 1998; Selden, Steven 2002; Sepkoski, http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mendel/subjects.htm
Johns Hopkins Magazine - February 1995 Issue Last October martin rodbell 49 became the 22nd person with a Hopkins link towin a Nobel Prize. rodbell, scientist emeritus at the National Institute of http://www.jhu.edu/~jhumag/295web/health.html
Extractions: Picking out cancer-ness, etc. To cure cancer, you have to know it's there, and the earlier the better. David Sidransky, Hopkins associate professor of oncology and otolaryngology, reports that his research team has developed a test with potential to spot the genetic fingerprints of any cell that is cloning itself, reproducing aggressively. In short, the test picks out clonalitywhat you might call cancer-ness. "Put it this way," says Sidransky. "We never find these genetic markers in people who do not have cancer." The clonal probes are also extremely sensitive, able to home in on a single cancer cell among 200 to 1,000 normal ones. Therefore, if the right markers are used, probes can reveal very early cancers by looking at body fluids, like urine or sputum. If the method proves outand a related one is already in use on Hopkins head and neck patientsscreening tests for people at risk will become a reality. Cancer surgeons will know in just a few days whether they "got it all"; they won't have to wait till recurrence to go in and cut some more. The result will be more actual cures, less need to make people suffer through protective radiation "just in case." In addition, treatment could come earlier and be more effective, Sidransky hopes. Please remember that none of these advances has happened yet. The millennium has not arrived. But Sidransky's lab has found, in effect, a shortcut, for if marking clonality works, there will be no need to discover every mutation that can lead to a particular kind of cancera near-impossible task. Now you'll only need to test various clonal markers, then combine the best to produce a screening test.
Allegro-Chronik 25 Jahre (2005) Translate this page rodbell, martin (2004) Sakmann, Bert (1991) Samuelsson, Bengt I. (1982) Sharp,Phillip A. (1993) Snell, George D. (1980) Sperry, Roger W. (1981) http://www.allegro-c.de/chronik/a28m.htm
Nat' Academies Press, The Language Of Life (2005) work of martin rodbell, I am especially indebted to The martin rodbell Collection 60 is in essence a communication device rodbell Collection. http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309089891/html/267.html
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-vi Introduction, pp. 1-8 1 Small Talk, pp. 9-40 2 Build It and They Will Talk, pp. 41-80 3 Plaiting the Net, pp. 81-138 4 Life in the Balance, pp. 139-184 5 "The Scenario-Buffered Building", pp. 185-240 6 The Viirtual Cell, pp. 241-260 Notes, pp. 261-304 Acknowledgements, pp. 305-306 Index, pp. 307-330 GO TO PAGE: The following HTML text is provided to enhance online readability. Many aspects of typography translate only awkwardly to HTML. Please use the page image as the authoritative form to ensure accuracy. regulation. Biochemical, physiological, and clinical insights derived from studies of the adrenergic receptors, New England Journal of Medicine p. 59
Nat' Academies Press, The Language Of Life (2005) RNA interference, 255, 256. RNA polymerase, 89, 90. Rockefeller University, 177.rodbell, martin, 6062, 63, 65. Roth, Robert, 57. Royal Society, 53, 195 http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309089891/html/325.html
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-vi Introduction, pp. 1-8 1 Small Talk, pp. 9-40 2 Build It and They Will Talk, pp. 41-80 3 Plaiting the Net, pp. 81-138 4 Life in the Balance, pp. 139-184 5 "The Scenario-Buffered Building", pp. 185-240 6 The Viirtual Cell, pp. 241-260 Notes, pp. 261-304 Acknowledgements, pp. 305-306 Index, pp. 307-330 GO TO PAGE:
The NSDL Scout Report For Life Sciences -- Volume 2, Number 17 martin rodbell Discovering How Cells Respond to Signals The virtual exhibitfeatures martin rodbell, who received the Nobel Prize for his pioneering http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/NSDL/LifeSci/2003/ls-030822-general.html
Extractions: Lovers of nature documentaries have reason to celebrate with Bugs!, a new "live-action nature drama filmed in awe inspiring, totally immersive 3D," now showing at IMAX theaters all over. The Web site offers loads of cool features, including a fun trailer for the movie, and extensive image gallery, and a detailed look at the making of the movie. The Web site and the movie trailer are available in different versions to accommodate visitors with slower connections. The site also includes a downloadable Teacher's Guide. [RS] Users will find important and possibly life-saving information on over 4,000 household products in this online database from the National Library of Medicine's Specialized Information Services. The database allows users to find out what a product contains, potential health effects, and safety and handling information. Users can quickly and easily search the database by product name, ingredients, or symptom. The products search seems to be the most user-friendly, as it is organized alphabetically and by general category, e.g. home maintenance, personal care/use, auto products, and so on.
Environ Health Perspect 107-1, 1999: Martin Rodbell Obituary martin rodbell, Nobel Prize winner, martin rodbell, Nobel Prize winner, NobelPrize recipient, Environ Health Perspect 1071, 1999 martin rodbell Obituary, http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1999/107-1/rodbell.html
Extractions: In Memoriam: Martin Rodbell, Nobel Prize winner Martin Rodbell, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1994, passed away 7 December 1998 after a long illness. Rodbell had a long and distinguished career in research and senior leadership positions at the National Institutes of Health. At different times in his career, he conducted research at the National Heart Institute, the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases (NIAMD), and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). He served as Scientific Director of the NIEHS from 1985 to 1989. In 1994 he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Alfred Gilman, Professor and Chairman in the Department of Pharmacology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, for their work on G-proteins, a key component of the communication system that regulates cellular activity. Rodbell was the fifth NIH intramural scientist to be awarded a Nobel Prize. Martin Rodbell was born on 1 December 1925 in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended public schools in Baltimore and graduated from an accelerated course at Baltimore City College, a highly selective public high school. Martin Rodbell matriculated at the Johns Hopkins University in 1943 but was soon drafted into the U.S. Navy. He served with the Navy in the South Pacific, the Philippines, Korea, and China before returning to the Johns Hopkins University and earning his Bachelor of Arts degree in biology in 1949. Martin received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Washington at Seattle in 1954 for research performed in the laboratory of Don Hanahan. Rodbell received postdoctoral training at the University of Illinois under Herbert Carter in the Department of Chemistry.
NIEHS News emeritus martin rodbell on winning the 1994 Nobel Prize in medicine. Speaking at the reception honoring rodbell and his 38year career at the NIH, http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1994/102-11/niehsnews.html
Extractions: "The fundamental thing is the opportunity to be creative," said Martin Rodbell speaking about the environment necessary for scientists to arrive at new breakthroughs. Rodbell is a scientist emeritus at the NIEHS and winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology. He spoke at a reception held in his honor at the NIEHS on October 13. Rodbell was honored for his work in discovering G-proteins, guanine nucleotide-dependent coupling entities which transmit signals within cells. G-proteins bind to GTP to regulate diverse hormonal functions involving adenylyl cyclase activation, phospholipase C, membrane ion channels, protein synthesis, and cellular growth and differentiation. More than 300 receptors are known to interact with G-proteins, and aberrations in the function of what Rodbell called these "communication devices" underlie a variety of disease states including cancer, diabetes, cholera, and alcoholism.
Science -- Sign In martin rodbell will be remembered for the mensch he was, for his seminalcontributions and for his models. Without him the concept of signal transduction http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/283/5408/1656
Extractions: You do not have access to this item: Full Text : Birnbaumer, RETROSPECTIVE:Martin Rodbell (1925-1998), Science You are on the site via Free Public Access. What content can I view with Free Public Access If you have a personal user name and password, please login below. SCIENCE Online Sign In Options For Viewing This Content User Name Password this computer. Help with Sign In If you don't use cookies, sign in here Join AAAS and subscribe to Science for free full access. Sign Up More Info Register for Free Partial Access including abstracts, summaries and special registered free full text content. Register More Info Pay per Article 24 hours for US $10.00 from your current computer Regain Access to a recent Pay per Article purchase Need More Help? Can't get past this page? Forgotten your user name or password? AAAS Members activate your FREE Subscription
Science -- Table Of Contents {Mar 12 1999; 283 (5408)} martin rodbell (19251998) Lutz Birnbaumer Science Mar 12 1999 1656. Full Text.Review. Storage and Executive Processes in the Frontal Lobes http://www.sciencemag.org/content/vol283/issue5408/index.shtml
Extractions: Hotter Than Expected * Electron Interferometer * CO Complexities * Coherent Kicks * All Quiet on the Basin and Range * Weighing Brown Dwarfs * Leaving an Imprint on C * Pulling and Tumbling Polymers * Forcing Bonds Apart * Maintaining Integrity * Getting a Leg Up * Signaling and Segregation in Drosophila * Diversity in Defense * Not Just Following Orders * How We Think * Monolayer Mechanics * Return Engagements Science Mar 12 1999: 1601 [Full Text] Research Article Mantle Values of Thermal Conductivity and the Geotherm from Phonon Lifetimes
Extractions: Return to: Subject Index How to Use Index Description List of Institutions (Subjects RELOCATION - RWANDA) Subject URL for Subject Pages RELOCATION REMOTE SENSING ANTARCTICA MAPS (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections REMOTE SENSING BIBLIOGRAPHY (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections REMOTE SENSING DICTIONARIES (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections REMOTE SENSING (7) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections REMOTE-SENSING IMAGES DATABASES (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections REMOTE-SENSING IMAGES (9) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENAISSANCE EXHIBITIONS (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENAISSANCE (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES BIBLIOGRAPHY (2) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES INFORMATION SERVICES (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES RESEARCH (2) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES STUDY AND TEACHING (1) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES UNITED STATES (3) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES (7) Infomine: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections RENT SUBSIDIES UNITED STATES (1)
Organizational Structure Of NIH He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine with martin rodbell for theirdiscovery of Gproteins and the role of these proteins in signal http://www4.nas.edu/webcr.nsf/CommitteeDisplay/BLSX-K-01-05-A?OpenDocument
Extractions: Tue, 21 Nov 2000 11:27:36 -0500 "The Death of Martin Rodbell, Nobel Laureate", written by Dr. Rodbell's daughter, Suzanne Richardson, appears in the Washington Post Today. Please click on the link below to read the full article. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47118-2000Nov21.html Previous message: [NIEHS-NewsList] Press Release - Study Of Normal Women Demonstrates: There Are Fe w "Safe" Days In Menstrual Cycle Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
DICCIONARIO ILUSTRADO DE TÉRMINOS MÉDICOS rodbell, martin (925-1998), Estados Unidos. Por susdescubrimientos sobre la proteínas G como integrantes de la transducción de http://www.iqb.es/diccio/n/nobel10.htm
Extractions: NEHER, Erwin (n 1944) Alemania; SAKMAN, Bert (n.1942) Alemania FISCHER Edmond H (n. 1920), Estados Unidos; KREBS, Edwin G (n.1920), Estados Unidos ROBERTS, Richard, J (n. 1943) Estados Unidos; SHARP, Phillip A (n. 1944) Estados Unidos GILMAN, Alfred G. (n. 1941), Estados Unidos; RODBELL, Martin (925-1998), Estados Unidos LEWIS, Edward B. (n. 1918) Estados Unidos ; NUSSLEIN-VOLLHARD, Christiane (n. 1942) Alemania; WIESCHAUS, Eric F (n. 1947), Estados Unidos DOHERTY, Peter C (n. 1940), Australia; ZINKERNAGEL, Rolf M (n. 1944) Suiza PRUSINER, Stanley (n. 1942) Estados Unidos por el descubrimiento de los priones como agentes infectantes FURCHGOTT, Robert F. (n. 1916) Estados Unidos; IGNARRO, Louis J (n.1941) Estados Unidos; MURAD, Ferid (n. 1936) Estados Unidos por sus descubrimientos sobre el NO como factor relajante del endotelio BLOBER, Gunther