Martin Chalfie, University Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University, shared the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his introduction of Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) ...
We are using the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to investigate aspects of nerve cell development and function. The wealth of developmental, anatomical, genetic, and molecular information available ...
The Department of Biological Sciences congratulates our Chairman, Dr. Martin Chalfie, on being awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of Green Fluorescent Protein. Although Chalfie's ...
Nobel laureate Martin Chalfie, PhD, will be the keynote speaker at Cedars-Sinai's Nanomedicine for Imaging and Treatment Conference, where two dozen experts from around the world will discuss emerging ...
Česká televize na sociálních sítích: ...
Other times, we are lucky to hear them speak in person. Martin Chalfie shared the 2008 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Osamu Shimomura and Roger Tsien for the “discovery and development of the ...
I wanted to have a tool like this. I thought this would be wonderful. —Martin Chalfie, Columbia University Today, we call them fluorescent proteins. Alongside aequorin, Shimomura and Johnson also ...
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Why Does Anyone Care About the Nobel Prize?“Just go to sleep,” Martin Chalfie’s wife told him late one October night in 2008. Chalfie, a Columbia University chemist, had co-authored an influential paper describing a new method for ...
Osamu Shimomura discovered GFP in the jellyfish __Aequorea victoria__ in 1962 while working at Princeton University, Martin Chalfie of Columbia University first expressed the protein in __E. coli__ ...
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