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News Source: The Examiner
| 3 months ago
Two Americans and a U.S. -based Japanese scientist won the Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for discovering and developing a glowing jellyfish protein that revolutionized the ability to study disease and normal development in living organisms.
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News Source: BDNews24
| 3 months ago
Two Americans scientists and a Japanese researcher won the 2008 Nobel prize for chemistry for their discovery of a green fluorescent protein that has become a key tool in bioscience, the prize committee said on Wednesday. The prestigious 10 million...
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News Source: Turkish Press
| 3 months ago
US scientist Martin Chalfie went on the internet to find out he was one of three co-winners of the 2008 Nobel Prize for chemistry, he said, after he ignored a telephone ring early Wednesday he thought came from next door. "A couple of day ago, I...
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News Source: Xinhuanet.com
| 3 months ago
American scientists Martin Chalfie and Roger Y. Tsien, and Osamu Shimomura of Japan won the 2008 Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for their discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein, or GFP. "The glowing proteins is one...
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News Source: National Public Radio
| 3 months ago
PR.org , October 8, 2008 · Three scientists who created a method for unveiling the previously invisible machinery inside living cells, using a protein that glows in the dark, won the 2008 Nobel Prize for chemistry. The winners are Osamu Shimomura, a...
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News Source: Uinta County News
| 3 months ago
his year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to three guys who discovered and developed something called green fluorescent protein. A Nobel Prize for anything green and fluorescent calls for a little visual storytelling, so we put together this slide...
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News Source: The Mercury
| 3 months ago
For 20 years from 1967, he made a summer pilgrimage to Friday Harbor in Washington state to gather more than 3,000 jellyfish per day. Mr Chalfie and colleagues got bacteria such as E. coli and tiny worms called C. elegans to produce the protein by...
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News Source: International Herald Tribune
| 3 months ago
One Japanese and two American scientists have received the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for taking the ability of some jellyfish to glow green and transforming it into a ubiquitous tool of molecular biology to watch the dance of living cells and the...
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News Source: Uinta County News
| 3 months ago
Roger Tsien, Osamu Shimomura and Martin Chalfie, all of whom contributed to developing and expanding the use of fluorescent proteins in biological applications. Fluorescent proteins, including those developed by Dr. Tsien, form the foundation for...
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News Source: Newsday
| 3 months ago
anhattan professor Martin Chalfie says he learned from the Internet that he was one of three winners of the Nobel Prize in chemistry. He slept through the phone call from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The 61-year-old Chalfie said Tuesday...