• Thumbnail for John Gurdon
    Sir John Bertrand Gurdon FRS (born 2 October 1933) is a British developmental biologist, best known for his pioneering research in nuclear transplantation...
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  • Sir John Gurdon (born 1933) is a Nobel-winning biologist. John Gurdon may also refer to: John Gurdon (died 1623), MP for Sudbury John Gurdon (died 1679)...
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  • Gurdon can refer to: Brampton Gurdon (disambiguation) Charles Gurdon (1855–1931), English rower and rugby union forward Edward Temple Gurdon, often known...
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  • The Gurdon Institute (officially the Wellcome/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute) is a research facility at the University of Cambridge, specialising...
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  • Thumbnail for Shinya Yamanaka
    Millennium Technology Prize together with Linus Torvalds. In 2012, he and John Gurdon were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for the discovery...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles Daniel Lane
    British molecular biologist who along with colleagues Gerard Marbaix and John Gurdon discovered the oocyte exogenous mRNA expression system – a system that...
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  • Thumbnail for Dolly (sheep)
    embryonic stem cells for cloning emerged from the foundational work of John Gurdon, who cloned African clawed frogs in 1958 with this approach. The successful...
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  • Thumbnail for John Gurdon (died 1623)
    John Gurdon (c. 1544 – 21 September 1623) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1571. Gurdon was the son of Robert...
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  • Thumbnail for John Gurdon Rebow
    John Gurdon Rebow (né John Gurdon; 1799 - 11 October 1870) was an English Liberal Party politician who sat in the House of Commons in two periods between...
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  • Thumbnail for Brampton Gurdon (of Assington and Letton)
    sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1622. Gurdon was the son of John Gurdon of Assington, Suffolk and his wife Amy Brampton, daughter of William...
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  • original on 9 September 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2021. "Professor John Gurdon honoured with prestigious American medical award". University of Cambridge...
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    inherited by John Gurdon Rebow, the widow of Mary Rebow, the daughter of Lt General Francis Slater Rebow depicted in Constable's painting. John Gurdon Rebow...
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  • John Gurdon (3 July 1595 – 9 September 1679) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons variously between 1640 and 1660. He supported the...
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  • Thumbnail for Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank
    Bishop deposited the anti c-MYC hybridoma 9e 10 Nobel Prize winner Sir John Gurdon deposited MyoD clone D7F2 Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus deposited...
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  • polynucleotides. 1955 – Arthur Kornberg discovered DNA polymerase enzymes. 1958 – John Gurdon used nuclear transplantation to clone an African Clawed Frog; first cloning...
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  • Thumbnail for Induced pluripotent stem cell
    cells. Shinya Yamanaka was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize along with Sir John Gurdon "for the discovery that mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripotent...
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  • synthesis using synthetic RNA as to substitute for messenger RNA (1961). John Gurdon clones an animal, a frog tadpole, from an egg cell using the nucleus...
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  • molecular biology". John Gurdon clones a frog using somatic-cell nuclear transfer from a Xenopus tadpole. Anne McLaren, with John D. Biggers, reports...
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  • John Everard Gurdon, DFC (24 May 1898 – 14 April 1973), was a British flying ace in the First World War credited with twenty-eight victories. Gurdon was...
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  • Thumbnail for Francis Crick
    The Francis Crick Graduate Lectures. The first two lectures were by John Gurdon and Tim Hunt. The inscription on the helices of a DNA sculpture (which...
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    the function of the nucleolus until 1964, when a study of nucleoli by John Gurdon and Donald Brown in the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis generated...
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    this technique, called reprogramming, later earned Shinya Yamanaka and John Gurdon the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. This was then followed in...
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  • Thumbnail for Colchester (UK Parliament constituency)
    Harbour, Lexden, Mile End, New Town, Prettygate, St Andrew's, St Anne's, St John's, St Mary's, Shrub End, and Stanway. Re-established as a Borough Constituency...
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  • by Sir John Gurdon. 1950 onward: the pioneering of the use of Xenopus eggs to translate microinjected messenger RNA molecules by Sir John Gurdon and fellow...
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  • American singer Dirce Migliaccio, Brazilian actress (d. 2009) October 2 John Gurdon, British developmental biologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology...
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  • and philosophy of science in 1977 and a PhD under the supervision of John Gurdon. Melton's early work was in general developmental biology, identifying...
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  • as it relates to the biology of race and racism in western society. John Gurdon (born 1933): British developmental biologist. In 2012, he and Shinya...
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  • Thumbnail for Polyploidy
    amphibian gametes, though this occurs more commonly in eggs than in sperm. John Gurdon (1958) transplanted intact nuclei from somatic cells to produce diploid...
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  • Gullstrand Physiology or Medicine 1911 Uppsala University John Gurdon Physiology or Medicine 2012 Gurdon Institute Trygve Haavelmo Economics 1989 University...
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  • Gascoigne Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester Sir Christopher Greenwood Sir John Gurdon Brenda Hale, Baroness Hale of Richmond Thomas Hardy Seamus Heaney Sir...
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