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Topic: Leland H Hartwell


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In the News (Sun 8 Nov 09)

  
  Leland H. Hartwell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leland H. (Lee) Hartwell (born October 30, 1939, in Los Angeles, California) is president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington.
Hartwell received his bachelor's degree from the California Institute of Technology in 1961.
Hartwell is the Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Board at the Canary Fund, a non-profit organization dedicated to developing new technologies for the early detection of cancer.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Leland_H._Hartwell   (350 words)

  
 Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Leland H. Hartwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. Hartwell is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field of yeastgenetics and cancer research.
Hartwell is an American Cancer Society Professor and professor of genetics at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Hartwell earned his B.S. in 1961 from the California Institute of Technology, a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1964, and then studied at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.
www.sigmaxi.org /programs/prizes/common.hartwell.shtml   (205 words)

  
 NIH News Release--NIH Grantee Leland Hartwell Wins Nobel Prize for Breakthroughs in Understanding the Cell Cycle- - ...
Leland H. Hartwell, a long-time grantee of the National Institutes of Health, was awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine today for his discovery of genes that control the cell division cycle.
Hartwell, president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle and professor of genetics at the University of Washington, also in Seattle, received the award jointly with Dr. Paul M. Nurse and Dr. R.
Hartwell has also documented the existence of cell cycle checkpoints, which are ordered collections of genes and proteins that ensure that cell cycle events have been completed properly before the cycle continues.
www.nih.gov /news/pr/oct2001/nigms-08.htm   (766 words)

  
 BookRags: Leland H. Hartwell Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. "Lee" Hartwell was a pioneer in the mid-1960s in developing yeast as a model system for genetics.
Hartwell's yeast and cell-cycle research eventually led to the findings for which Hartwell is most known: control of the cell cycle and its relationship to cancer.
Hartwell continued his work with yeast, expanding it in the 1980s to develop the notion of checkpoints, which are genes that act as control circuits to halt the cell cycle when they recognize the presence of chromosomal damage.
www.bookrags.com /biography/leland-h-hartwell-wog   (703 words)

  
 Physiology or Medicine for 2001 - Press Release
Leland Hartwell (born 1939), Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, USA, is awarded for his discoveries of a specific class of genes that control the cell cycle.
Leland Hartwell realized already at the end of the 1960s the possibility of studying the cell cycle with genetic methods.
It was identical to the gene ("start") that Hartwell earlier had identified in baker's yeast, controlling the transition from G1 to S. This gene (cdc2) was thus found to regulate different phases of the cell cycle.
nobelprize.org /nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2001/press.html   (1711 words)

  
 The Lasker Foundation | Former Award Winners, Basic Medical Research
Dr. Lee Hartwell, professor of genetics at the University of Washington, decided more than 30 years ago to study cell division in yeast cells because they are simpler and easier to manipulate than human cells.
At the time, Hartwell relates, this decision was "a fairly risky assumption," as he was the only person looking at yeast cells from the point of view of trying to find genes that control cell development.
In his most recent work, Hartwell is studying "checkpoints" in the cell division sequence to determine if lack of control at crucial points in cell division may contribute to the development of cancer.
www.laskerfoundation.org /awards/library/1998b_paper_lh.shtml   (776 words)

  
 Profile
Schrick K, Garvik B, Hartwell L H, Mating in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: the role of the pheromone signal transduction pathway in the chemotropic response to pheromone.
Weinert T A, Kiser G L, Hartwell L H, Mitotic checkpoint genes in budding yeast and the dependence of mitosis on DNA replication and repair.
Hartwell L, Defects in a cell cycle checkpoint may be responsible for the genomic instability of cancer cells.
myprofile.cos.com /hartwell46   (888 words)

  
 Leland Hartwell awarded Nobel
Hartwell said he was sleeping early today when a Hutchinson staffer called to give him the news.
Hartwell said he knew he might be considered for the Nobel Prize, especially after he won the Gairdner Foundation International Award for Achievements in Science in 1992 and Albert Lasker Award for basic medical research in 1998.
Hartwell, a native of Los Angeles, earned his bachelor's degree at California Institute of Technology in 1961 and his doctorate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1964.
www.its.caltech.edu /~alumni/hartwell.htm   (697 words)

  
 NIH grantee Leland Hartwell wins Nobel Prize for breakthroughs in understanding the cell cycle
Leland H. Hartwell, a long-time grantee of the National Institutes of Health, was awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of genes that control the cell division cycle.
Hartwell has used a simple, one-celled organism--Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or baker's yeast--as a model system for tackling the difficult problem of how a cell is able to copy its genetic information faithfully and divide in two without transmitting potentially lethal genetic errors.
Dr. Hartwell has also documented the existence of cell cycle checkpoints, which are ordered collections of genes and proteins that ensure that cell cycle events have been completed properly before the cycle continues.
www.eurekalert.org /pub_releases/2001-10/niog-n100901.php   (736 words)

  
 Leland H Hartwell
Hartwell doktorsexamen vid Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1964.
Leland Hartwell upptäckte en av en klass gener som kontrollerar cellcykeln.
Hartwell införde också begreppet kontrollstationer ("checkpoints") som innebär att cellcykeln stannar upp när cellens DNA utsätts för skada.
www.xasa.com /wiki/sv/wikipedia/l/le/leland_h_hartwell.html   (274 words)

  
 C&EN: NEWS OF THE WEEK - REGULATORS OF THE CELL CYCLE
Leland H. Hartwell, 61, president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, and professor of genetics at the University of Washington, will share the approximately $950,000 prize with biochemist R.
Hartwell was the first to discover that the products of specific genes are responsible for controlling the cycle of growth and division in cells.
Hartwell also identified the specific yeast gene that controls passage through the first checkpoint in the cell cycle.
pubs.acs.org /cen/topstory/7942/print/7942notw2.html   (610 words)

  
 University of Pittsburgh News
Hartwell’s lecture was originally scheduled as part of last September’s Science 2001 – A Research Odyssey, a showcase of research at the University of Pittsburgh.
Hartwell’s ideas and experimental work have stimulated new research initiatives by many laboratories around the world and have been instrumental in the development of therapeutic strategies for diseases caused by uncontrolled cell growth.
Dr. Hartwell has received numerous awards and honors over the course of his career including the Brandeis University Rosensteil Award, the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Katherine Berkan Judd Award, the Genetics Society of America Medal, the MGH Warren Triennial Prize, the Columbia University Horwitz Award, the Passano Award and the Albert Lasker Award for medical research.
www.pitt.edu /~univrel/media/hartwell.html   (359 words)

  
 Leland H Hartwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. Hartwell is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field...
Leland H. Leland H. Hartwell, president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Research Center at the University of...
Leland H. Hartwell was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (2001) at his 62...
hunttim.queenhunt.com /lelandhhartwell   (953 words)

  
 PNRI | Lee Hartwell Receives 2004 Langerhans-Virchow Award (7-Apr-04)
Hartwell received the Nobel Prize in 2001 for his pioneering discoveries of the mechanisms of cell division.
Hartwell is the fifth annual recipient of PNRI's award lecture.
Drawing on his own research and surveying the broad field of cancer studies, Hartwell will describe how the insights that have been gained from lab research are being used to develop targeted drugs to interrupt tumor growth and spread.
www.pnri.org /news/2004/hartwell.html   (334 words)

  
 2001 Nobel Laureate Leland H. Hartwell to Give University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine's 82nd Mellon Lecture -- ...
Hartwell's lecture was originally scheduled as part of last September's Science 2001 - A Research Odyssey, a showcase of research at the University of Pittsburgh.
Hartwell's lecture, "From Yeast Cell Division to Human Cancer: The Unity of Biology," will focus on his work using baker's yeast to study fundamental biological processes such as cell division and growth.
Hartwell has received numerous awards and honors over the course of his career including the Brandeis University Rosensteil Award, the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Katherine Berkan Judd Award, the Genetics Society of America Medal, the MGH Warren Triennial Prize, the Columbia University Horwitz Award, the Passano Award and the Albert Lasker Award for medical research.
www.upci.upmc.edu /news/upci_news/2002/050602_medschool_mellon.html   (399 words)

  
 Citebase - Scientometric portrait of Nobel laureate Leland H. Hartwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Scientometric portrait of Nobel laureate Leland H. Hartwell
Leland H. Hartwell was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (2001) at his 62 years age and at 41 years of research publishing career.
Highest collaboration coefficient (1) for Leland H. Hartwell was found during 1963-1965, 1968-1969, 1977, 1981-1983, 1985-1990, 1996 and 1998-2001.
citebase.eprints.org /cgi-bin/citations?id=oai:eprints.rclis.org:1442   (326 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell
Hartwell zeigte bereits als Kind lebhaftes Interesse an Biologie, verbunden mit dem Verlangen nach gründlichem Verständnis der beobachteten Phänomene.
Für die Tumordiagnostik und -therapie ergeben sich mit dem von Leland gefundenen Wissen neue Möglichkeiten, die derzeit von vielen Forschergruppen weltweit untersucht werden.
Leland's Webseite an der Univ. Seattle mit Literturangaben
www.aha-express.de /Artikel/Biologe/Leland_H._Hartwell.html   (438 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. Hartwell (born October 30 1939 in Los Angeles California) is president and director of the Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle Washington.
Thanks Leland for allowing me to hear some good country music, this is the be...
Leland Gregory has done it again with another Wacky CD to add to your...
www.freeglossary.com /Leland_H._Hartwell   (319 words)

  
 LELAND H. HARTWELL   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
LELAND H. Leland H. Hartwell est président et directeur du centre de recherche sur le cancer de Fred Hutchinson à Seattle, Washington.
Il a gagné le prix 2001 Nobel dans la physiologie ou la médecine pour sa compréhension du cycle de cellules au cours des années d'étudier la levure.
It is licensed under the GNU free documentation license.
www.faktis.com /wiki/fr/le/Leland%20H%20Hartwell.htm   (69 words)

  
 PNRI | About Leland H. Hartwell, Ph. D.
In 2001, Dr. Leland Hartwell received the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his pioneering discoveries of the mechanisms of cell division.
Using the budding yeast that is essential for brewing beer and baking bread, Dr. Hartwell identified many genes that control cell division.
Hartwell was educated at the California Institute of Technology and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
www.pnri.org /seminars/lang-vir/2004/hartwell.html   (227 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell Leben Biochemiker Massachusetts Institute of Technology Los Angeles Tumor Nobelpreisvorlesung mit ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. Hartwell Leben Biochemiker Massachusetts Institute of Technology Los Angeles Tumor Nobelpreisvorlesung mit Literaturangaben Akademische Auszeichnungen Zellteilung Autobiografie Nobelpreis
Leland H. Hartwell Winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or...
Leland H. Hartwell, the 2001 Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, at the Nobel Prize...
www.marketing-aduni.de /WanBSz4I7ugkvdFMttXcvg%3D%3D_Leland_H._Hartwell.html   (543 words)

  
 Pitt Campaign Chronicle: Discoverer of Cell Cycle Checkpoints To Deliver Mellon Lecture as Part of Science2001
Leland H. Hartwell, president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Research Center at the University of Washington, will present the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine’s 82nd Mellon Lecture at
After completing his Ph.D. at M.I.T., Hartwell began his professional research at the Salk Institute, but it wasn’t until he moved to the University of California at Irvine that he began his work with yeast.
Hartwell has received numerous awards and honors, including the Louis S. Rosentiel Award for Distinguished Work in Basic Medical Sciences, the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Katherine Berkan Judd Award, the Genetics Society of America Medal, the MGH Warren Triennial Prize, the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the Passano Award, and the Albert Lasker Award for medical research.
www.umc.pitt.edu /media/pcc010910/hartwell.html   (307 words)

  
 E-LIS - Scientometric portrait of Nobel laureate Leland H. Hartwell
E-LIS - Scientometric portrait of Nobel laureate Leland H. Hartwell
Angadi, Mallikarjun and Koganuramath, M. and Kademani, B. and Kalyane, V. and Sen, B. Scientometric portrait of Nobel laureate Leland H. Hartwell.
A scientometric appreciation of H. Eysenk's contributions to psychology.
eprints.rclis.org /archive/00001442   (1562 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell
Der Artikel Leland H. Hartwell gehört zur Kategorie: Mann, Biologe, Nobelpreisträger für Medizin
NAME=Hartwell, Leland H. Biochemiker und Krebsforscher, ist Direktor des Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center an der University of Seattle GEBURTSDATUM=30.
Erklärung des Begriff Leland H. Hartwell und dessen Bedeutung wurde zuletzt am 11.8.2006 aktualisiert (Glossar Lexikon Enzyklopädie).
www.web-lexikon.de /Leland_H._Hartwell.html   (473 words)

  
 ۞ Leland H. Hartwell - Infos und Erklärungen auf www.naturToday.de   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Astin, Helen S. Astin, Carole Leland Women of Influence, Women of Vision, 6" X 9": A Cross-Generational Study of Leaders and Social Change (Jossey-Bass, 1999-08)
Leland H. Hemming Architectural Electromagnetic Shielding Handbook (Wiley and Sons, 2000)
Hartwell zeigte bereits als Kind lebhaftes Interesse an Biologie, verb...
www.naturtoday.de /Leland_H._Hartwell   (762 words)

  
 Integrating Genetic Approaches into the Discovery of Anticancer Drugs -- Hartwell et al. 278 (5340): 1064 -- Science
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L. Hartwell, P. ankasi, and S. Friend are at the Seattle Project, Molecular Pharmacology Department, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98109, USA.
Nojima, H. Hochegger, A. Saberi, T. Fukushima, K. Kikuchi, M. Yoshimura, B. Orelli, D. Bishop, S. Hirano, M. Ohzeki, M. Ishiai, K. Yamamoto, M. Takata, H. Arakawa, J.-M. Buerstedde, M. Yamazoe, T. Kawamoto, K. Araki, J. Takahashi, N. Hashimoto, S. Takeda, and E. Sonoda (2005).
www.sciencemag.org /cgi/content/abstract/278/5340/1064   (1011 words)

  
 Online Photo Album
Home » Photo Album » Monday, March 29, 2004 » AACR Distinguished Lecture » Leland H. Hartwell, Ph.D. Please select a day to preview pictures from the AACR 95th Annual Meeting:
This AACR Lectureship has been established to recognize and present outstanding science that has the potential to inspire new thinking and perspectives on the etiology, progression, and prevention of cancer.
Leland H. Hartwell, Ph.D. Dr. Leland H. Hartwell (left) and AACR President Dr. Karen S. Antman (right) at the AACR Distinguished Lecture.
www.aacr.org /PhotoAlbum/2004Webcast/picturesGallery.asp?PID=1000931   (127 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Search hartwell and keowee lake property 3 different ways and much more.
Netster.com makes it fast and easy to find leland h.
We don't have an article called "Leland h.
www.abcworld.net /Leland_H._Hartwell.html   (49 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell Ablauf Preisträger Leland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Hartwell vom Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Es ist kein Zufall, dass alle drei Preisträger inzwischen seit vielen Jahren an Instituten
Werbe Informationen zu Leland H. Hartwell, Leland Institute Preisträger sowie Zellteilung.
Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Leland H. Hartwell aus der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia und steht unter der GNU Lizenz für freie Dokumente.
www.enzyklopda.de /infos/l/le/leland.html   (1045 words)

  
 Leland H. Hartwell Winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Leland H. Hartwell Winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Leland H. Hartwell — Autobiography (submitted by Sam)
Leland H. Hartwell Biography from Encyclopedia Britannica (submitted by www.britannica.com)
almaz.com /nobel/medicine/2001a.html   (221 words)

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