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1,341 result(s) for "Molecular biologists."
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Sydney Brenner (1927-2019)
Brenner had proved theoretically in the mid-1950s that the genetic code is 'non-overlapping' - each nucleotide is part of only one triplet (three nucleotides specify each amino acid in a protein) and successive 'triplet codons' are read in order. In 1975, with Paul Berg and others, he organized a meeting at Asilomar, California, to draft a position paper on the United States' use of recombinant DNA technology - introducing genes from one species into another, usually bacteria. In 1986, he moved to a new Medical Research Council (MRC) unit of molecular genetics at the city's Addenbrooke's Hospital, and began work in the emerging discipline of evolutionary genomics.
New hominin species, asteroid explosion and Sydney Brenner dies
The week in science: 5–11 April 2019. The week in science: 5–11 April 2019. View from the rear of the first chamber if the Callao Cave in the Philippines, where the fossil Homo luzonensis was discovered.
Rosalind Franklin : el secreto de la vida
El secreto de la vida Rosalind Franklin fue una de las químicas más influyentes del siglo XX. Experta en el uso de rayos X, desveló uno de los enigmas mejor guardados de la naturaleza: la estructura del ADN, la molécula que asegura que todos nosotros, humanos, animales, plantas y otros organismos, parezcamos nuestros progenitores. La vida de Rosalind Franklin es un ejemplo de superación y trabajo, habiendo contribuido al descubrimiento del secreto de la vida. Tanto el registro de la narrativa como el estilo de las imágenes son adecuados para escolares de entre 8 y 11 años. El texto y las imágenes se aseguran de lidiar con hilos pedagógicos que atraviesan el ámbito de actividad de los personajes, tanto para las lecturas familiares en el hogar como en la escuela, apoyando el programa educativo. Además, a lo largo de la narrativa el lector encontrará toda la información necesaria para situar adecuadamente a la figura en un contexto sociohistórico.
Rosalind Franklin
Born into a large, well-educated, and loving family in London, Rosalind grew up with a keen desire to do things that would better the lives of others. By the age of 15, she knew she wanted to be a scientist. Less than 20 years later, she took the world's first photograph of DNA, changing the future of science forever. This inspiring story of the pioneering scientist features a fact and photo section at the back.
Russian biologist plans more CRISPR-edited babies
The proposal follows a Chinese scientist who claimed to have created twins from edited embryos last year. The proposal follows a Chinese scientist who claimed to have created twins from edited embryos last year. Denis Rebrikov