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  1. John Edward Sulston, né le 27 mars 1942 à Fulmer dans le Buckinghamshire au Royaume-Uni et mort le 6 mars 2018, est un biologiste britannique. Il reçoit le Prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine en 2002 pour ses travaux fondamentaux sur Caenorhabditis elegans.

  2. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_SulstonJohn Sulston - Wikipedia

    John Sulston. Sir John Edward Sulston ( Buckinghamshire, 24 marzo 1942 – 6 marzo 2018) è stato un biologo britannico, premio Nobel per la medicina per gli studi compiuti insieme a H. Robert Horvitz e Sydney Brenner sulla regolazione genica cellulare e sull' apoptosi [1] .

  3. 9 de mar. de 2018 · Madrid - Mar 09, 2018 - 11:21 EST. El biólogo británico John E. Sulston, premio Nobel en 2002 por sus descubrimientos sobre la regulación genética en el desarrollo de órganos y la muerte ...

  4. 7 de oct. de 2002 · John Sulston desarrolló técnicas que sirvieron para analizar cómo evolucionan las células desde su origen en el óvulo fecundado (huevo o cigoto) hasta llegar a las 959 que conforman a un gusano adulto. En una publicación de 1976, el científico describió el linaje celular (qué célula proviene de cuál durante el proceso de desarrollo ...

  5. John Sulston, who died on March 6, 2018, was the first speaker at the fifth International C. elegans Meeting in 1985. In his talk, John described the progress he and Alan Coulson had made toward determining the physical map of the C. elegans genome. This mapping project was very new and quite different from John’s previous work describing the complete C. elegans cell lineage.

  6. John Sulston (1942–2018) Any scientist would be proud to have changed the world. John Sulston changed the way we think about biology not once, not twice, but three times: first with his elucidation of the C. elegans cell lineage, then in pioneering genome mapping and sequencing, and lastly through his leadership in promoting open data. Along ...

  7. John Sulston changed the way we do science, not once, but three times - initially with the complete cell lineage of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, next with completion of the genome sequences of the worm and human genomes and finally with his strong and active advocacy for open data sharing.His contributions were widely recognized and in 2002 he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology and ...