• Thumbnail for Frederick Sanger
    Frederick Sanger OM CH CBE FRS FAA (/ˈsæŋər/; 13 August 1918 – 19 November 2013) was a British biochemist who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice...
    51 KB (5,320 words) - 03:05, 23 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sanger sequencing
    Sanger sequencing has been replaced by next generation sequencing methods, especially for large-scale, automated genome analyses. However, the Sanger...
    27 KB (3,257 words) - 15:31, 12 April 2024
  • The Wellcome Sanger Institute, previously known as The Sanger Centre and Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, is a non-profit British genomics and genetics...
    41 KB (3,938 words) - 07:36, 13 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Margaret Sanger
    Margaret Higgins Sanger (born Margaret Louise Higgins; September 14, 1879 – September 6, 1966), also known as Margaret Sanger Slee, was an American birth...
    106 KB (11,565 words) - 16:56, 22 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Insulin
    Toronto, were the first to isolate insulin from dog pancreas in 1921. Frederick Sanger sequenced the amino acid structure in 1951, which made insulin the...
    121 KB (13,799 words) - 14:41, 17 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dideoxynucleotide
    Maxam–Gilbert method) but the Sanger method is both the "most widely used and the method used by most automated DNA sequencers." Sanger won his second Nobel Prize...
    10 KB (1,180 words) - 10:56, 16 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of Nobel laureates
    awarded to John Bardeen twice, as was the Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Frederick Sanger and Karl Barry Sharpless. Two laureates have been awarded twice but...
    53 KB (1,621 words) - 03:49, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Genomics
    ISBN 978-0-07-124320-9. Sanger F (1980). "Nobel lecture: Determination of nucleotide sequences in DNA" (PDF). Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2010-10-18. Sanger F, Air GM...
    78 KB (7,518 words) - 05:13, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for DNA sequencing
    comparative ease, the Sanger method was soon automated and was the method used in the first generation of DNA sequencers. Sanger sequencing is the method...
    129 KB (14,413 words) - 04:34, 7 April 2024
  • dideoxynucleotide chain-terminating sequencing, which was later termed Sanger sequencing. Sanger readily acknowledged Coulson's contributions to the development...
    5 KB (474 words) - 21:23, 22 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Frederick (given name)
    (fictional), elderly, widowed, sarcastic, and cantankerous junk dealer Frederick Sanger, British Biochemist that twice won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, one...
    14 KB (1,477 words) - 01:31, 19 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1-Fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene
    In 1945, Frederick Sanger described its use for determining the N-terminal amino acid in polypeptide chains, in particular insulin. Sanger's initial results...
    7 KB (580 words) - 10:39, 11 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Walter Gilbert
    awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, shared with Frederick Sanger and Paul Berg. Gilbert and Sanger were recognized for their pioneering work in devising...
    18 KB (1,670 words) - 10:43, 23 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Karl Barry Sharpless
    Linus Pauling and Frederick Sanger, and the third to have been awarded two prizes in the same discipline (after Bardeen and Sanger). Sharpless was born...
    13 KB (1,021 words) - 09:46, 7 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Maxam–Gilbert sequencing
    Gilbert published their chemical sequencing method two years after Frederick Sanger and Alan Coulson published their work on plus-minus sequencing, Maxam–Gilbert...
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  • and once in peace; K. Barry Sharpless awarded twice in chemistry; Frederick Sanger awarded twice in chemistry; Marie Curie awarded once in physics and...
    73 KB (7,751 words) - 18:54, 18 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fritz Haber
    leave Germany. Brigadier Harold Hartley, Sir William Jackson Pope and Frederick G. Donnan arranged for Haber to be officially invited to Cambridge, England...
    67 KB (7,268 words) - 07:05, 16 April 2024
  • Sanger is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alexander C. Sanger, American reproductive rights activist Andrew Sanger (born 1948), British...
    2 KB (265 words) - 21:55, 30 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for John Bardeen
    have won multiple Nobel Prizes in the same category (the others being Frederick Sanger and Karl Barry Sharpless in chemistry), and one of five persons with...
    44 KB (4,698 words) - 10:51, 6 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Paul Berg
    the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1980, along with Walter Gilbert and Frederick Sanger. The award recognized their contributions to basic research involving...
    18 KB (1,423 words) - 18:28, 28 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for List of Nobel laureates in Chemistry
    They would later receive a medal and diploma, but not the money. Frederick Sanger is one out of three laureates to be awarded the Nobel Prize twice in...
    106 KB (3,452 words) - 19:13, 6 April 2024
  • Jerne, Robert B. Merrifield 1971 Charles Best, Rachmiel Levine [de], Frederick Sanger, Donald F. Steiner, Solomon A. Berson, Rosalyn S. Yalow 1972 Sune Bergström...
    11 KB (1,277 words) - 18:41, 11 April 2024
  • Frederick Sanger and Alan Coulson presented a rapid gene sequencing technique which uses dideoxynucleotides and gel electrophoresis. 1978 – Frederick...
    22 KB (2,810 words) - 18:46, 22 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nobel Prize
    Bardeen; received the prize twice. Nobel Prize in Physics (1956, 1972). Frederick Sanger; received the prize twice. Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1958, 1980). United...
    121 KB (11,549 words) - 21:12, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Genetics
    important development was chain-termination DNA sequencing in 1977 by Frederick Sanger. This technology allows scientists to read the nucleotide sequence...
    98 KB (10,393 words) - 15:11, 15 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for King's College, Cambridge
    laureate in physics Alan Turing, mathematician and computer scientist Frederick Sanger, double Nobel laureate in Chemistry Salman Rushdie, novelist Stephen...
    57 KB (6,139 words) - 08:15, 29 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Linus Pauling
    than one Nobel Prize (the others being Marie Curie, John Bardeen, Frederick Sanger, and Karl Barry Sharpless). Of these, he is the only person to have...
    141 KB (13,984 words) - 12:31, 27 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for St John's College, Cambridge
    especially in the statistical interpretation of the wavefunction". Frederick Sanger, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1958, "for his work on the structure of proteins...
    67 KB (7,884 words) - 05:08, 27 April 2024
  • has been performed using the chain termination method developed by Frederick Sanger. This technique uses sequence-specific termination of a DNA synthesis...
    13 KB (1,697 words) - 08:14, 24 September 2023
  • Hawking, James Clerk Maxwell, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Ernest Rutherford, Frederick Sanger, and Alan Turing. Peter Sands, an advisor to the British Government...
    12 KB (1,050 words) - 15:34, 9 March 2024