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瑞士微生物学家
沃纳·亚伯 一般翻译为阿尔伯,是一位瑞士微生物学家及遗传学家,曾经因限制酶的发现,以及关于重组DNA技术的发展研究,而于1978年与美国的丹尼尔·那森斯(Daniel Nathans)及汉弥尔顿·史密斯(Hamilton Smith),共同获得诺贝尔生理学或医学奖。
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20220745/
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1. The 2009 Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting: Werner Arber, physiology or medicine 1978.
J Vis Exp (P 1940-087X E 1940-087X) H指数:0 2010 年 37 期
PMID:20220745 相似文献
J Vis Exp
. 2010 Mar 10;(37):1571.
doi: 10.3791/1571.
PMID: 20220745
PMCID: PMC3168210
DOI: 10.3791/1571
Free PMC article
Swiss microbial geneticist, Werner Arber shared the 1978 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Hamilton Smith and Daniel Nathans for their discovery of restriction endonucleases. Werner Arber was born in Granichen, Switzerland in 1929. Following a public school education, he entered the Swiss Polytechnical School in Zurich in 1949, working toward a diploma in natural sciences. There, his first research experience involved isolating and characterizing an isomer of chlorine. Following graduation in 1953, Arber joined a graduate program at the University of Geneva, taking on an assistanceship in electron microscopy (EM), in which he studied gene transfer in the bacterial virus (bacteriophage) lambda. Eventually encountering limitations with EM as a tool, he began using microbial genetics as a methodology for his studies. The study of microbial genetics had been possible for a relatively short time: DNA had been discovered to carry genetic information only a decade before he d entered the field. After earning his Ph.D. in 1958, Arber continued to develop skills in microbial genetics, working with colleagues in the United States for a short time before returning to Geneva at beginning of 1960. There, he continued working on lambda transduction in E. coli, but found that the virus would not efficiently propagate. Recalling research done seven years earlier by Joe Bertani and Jean Weigle on "host-controlled restriction-modification", he realized there must be a host-controlled modification of the invading DNA, and sought to identify the mechanism. Based on Grete Kallengerger s work that demonstrated degradation of both irradiated and non-irradiated phage lambda following injection in a host, Arber and his graduate student, Daisy Dussoix further investigated the fate of DNA, and found that restriction and modification (later determined to be postreplicative nuclotide methylation) directly affected DNA, but did not cause mutations. They also found that theses were properties of the bacterial strains, and that both viral and cellular DNA were degraded. Together, Arber and Dussoix reported their findings to scientific community in 1961 at the First International Biophysics Congress in Stockholm. Aber also presented the research to the Science Faculty of University of Geneva in 1962, earning the Plantamour-Prevost prize. Based on his work and the work of others, he hypothesized that an enzyme in the host bacterium cut DNA into smaller pieces at specific sites, and methylase modified the host DNA to protect it from the digestive enzyme. These theories were later confirmed by Urs Kuhnlein, who found that mutation of specific sites rendered the phage resistant to cleavage; Hamilton smith, who identified Type II endonuclease HindII; and Daniel Nathans, who used HindII to break the SV40 virus into 11 fragments, allowing him to determine its method of replication. Since the discovery of restriction endonucleases, researchers have used them as tools to study the functions of genes of all types of organisms. Restriction enzymes have also facilitated the study of gene functions and enabled production of substances of medical and nutritional importance. Arber feels that in the next few decades we will learn much from the study of epigentics --factors that can affect the phenotype of an organism without changing the genetic information--. He is proud that, in that studying restriction degradation and DNA methylation in the 1960s, he was among the first in studying epigenetic phenomenon.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 1979 Feb 3;123(5):153-6.PMID: 368662 Dutch. No abstract available.
The 2009 Lindau Nobel Laureate meeting: Martin Chalfie, Chemistry 2008.
J Vis Exp. 2010 Feb 10;(36):1570. doi: 10.3791/1570.PMID: 20147885 Free PMC article.
Postepy Biochem. 1979;25(2):251-3.PMID: 388391 Polish. No abstract available.
ATP-dependent restriction enzymes.
Prog Nucleic Acid Res Mol Biol. 2000;64:1-63. doi: 10.1016/s0079-6603(00)64001-1.PMID: 10697406 Review.
Sergei Winogradsky: a founder of modern microbiology and the first microbial ecologist.
FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2012 Mar;36(2):364-79. doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2011.00299.x. Epub 2011 Aug 11.PMID: 22092289 Review.
Warner Arber - Autobiography [Internet] The Nobel Foundation; c2003. [cited 2010 Mar 9]. Available from: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1978/arber-autobio....
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