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21-02-2012 17:22 THIS VIDEO BELONGS TO THOSE THAT PRODUCED IT. IT IS NOT MINE AT ALL. I AM HONORED TO BE ALLOWED TO COPY AND PROMOTE IT.
Public release date: 21-Feb-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Dr.
Dr. Renato Dulbecco, an Italian American virologist who shared the 1975 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for demonstrating how certain types of viruses invade mammalian cells to cause cancer, died of natural causes Sunday at his home in La Jolla. He was 97.
ROME (AP) — Renato Dulbecco, who shared the 1975 Nobel Prize in medicine for his seminal research on the interaction between tumors and cells, has died in California. He was 97. Dulbecco, an early proponent of sequencing genomes that led to the Human Genome Project, died in La Jolla, California overnight, Italy's National Research Council — where Dulbecco worked on the genome project in the 1990s — said Monday
SAN DIEGO–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Biocept, Inc., a privately-held, CLIA certified laboratory testing company focused on detection and analysis of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in cancer patients, announced that two of its senior scientists, Farideh Bischoff, Ph.D., Vice President of Translational Research, and Lyle Arnold, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, R&D and Chief Scientific Officer, will be making presentations at the 19th Annual Molecular Medicine Tri-Con being held in San Francisco February 19-23. Dr. Arnold spoke during the “Blood-Based Cancer Diagnostics” session on Monday, February 20th.
In a report in the Feb. 9 edition of Nature, the researchers showed that a chemical modification on the thermostat protein changes how it's controlled.
Public release date: 21-Feb-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Vanessa McMains vmcmain1@jhmi.edu 410-502-9410 Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Johns Hopkins and National Taiwan University researchers have discovered more details about how an energy sensing “thermostat” protein determines whether cells will store or use their energy reserves. In a report in the Feb. 9 edition of Nature, the researchers showed that a chemical modification on the thermostat protein changes how it's controlled.
DUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/b93d9c/evolutionary_biolo) has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new book “Evolutionary Biology: Cell-Cell Communication, and Complex Disease” to their offering.
02-10-2011 00:34 Dr Tony Talebi discusses the Plasma Cell Dyscrasias Chapter of “Hematology and Transfusion Medicine Board Review Made Simple.” Visit www.HemOnc101.com
24-11-2011 04:57 inktalks.com Pioneering surgeon Susan Lim performed the first liver transplant in Asia. But a moral concern with transplants (where do those new livers come from?) led her to look further, and to ask Could we be transplanting cells, not whole organs