Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In his new book, “Why We Die: The New Science of Aging and the Quest for Immortality,” Nobel Prize-winning molecular biologist Venki Ramakrishnan sifts through past and cutting-edge research ...
Venki Ramakrishnan, a Nobel laureate and former president of the world's oldest scientific academy, the Royal Society, has been watching as aging science and the hype around it has exploded.
Venkatraman Ramakrishnan (born 1952) is a British-American structural biologist. He shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Thomas A. Steitz and Ada Yonath for research on the structure and function of ribosomes .
In November, Venki Ramakrishnan, a Nobel laureate and the author of "Why We Die," shared three habits he lives by: eating nutritious foods in modest portions, cycling every day, and getting eight ...
Venkatraman (Venki) Ramakrishnan (Indian-born American and British, 1952– ) — winner of 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (with Steitz and Yonath) for crystal structure of the 30S subunit of the bacterial ribosome; Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy — solid-state NMR; John Randall — X-ray and neutron diffraction of proteins and DNA
Thomas Arthur Steitz (August 23, 1940 – October 9, 2018 [1]) was an American biochemist, a Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University, and investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, best known for his pioneering work on the ribosome.
He was a member of the team in Ramakrishnan's lab that solved the first X-ray crystal structure of the small (30S) ribosomal subunit. [6] Carter also determined structures of 30S bound to antibiotics [7] and bound to the initiation factor IF1. [8] Ramakrishnan shared the Nobel prize in Chemistry for the team's work on the 30S. [9]
An AI system developed by Google‘s DeepMind has made a “once in a generation” breakthrough that could have a dramatic impact on the way we treat diseases: accurately predicting how proteins ...