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发表于 2009-12-28 08:42:59
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假的!!!!!
原因:在其首页称 他们的合做人是:
Ferry Sutcliffe 教授 、博士
2007诺贝尔医学奖获得者 美国北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校病理学和医学实验室教授。1925年出生于英国,现为美国公民。1951年获牛津大学生物化学博士学位,是“诺痹欣纳(nubhina)”创始人之一, 重点科研研究方向为:风湿骨病及其防治,在风湿、类风湿、强直性脊柱炎、骨关节病的研究处于国际领先水平。
但根本找不到Ferry Sutcliffe 教授 、博士, 2007诺贝尔医学奖获得者
来自美国北卡罗来纳大学, 名叫 : Oliver Smithies
The 2007 Nobel Prize in Medicine
"for their discoveries of principles for introducing specific gene modifications in mice by the use of embryonic stem cells"
The Prize in Medicine is shared by three people, Mario R. Capecchi of the University of Utah USA, Sir Martin J. Evans of Cardiff University UK and Oliver Smithies of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill USA.
Collaborating on different aspects of the process, three scientists have discovered techniques to produce what are called ‘knockout mice’. These aren’t rodents which will make your cat cower in terror – or wait by the door like muggers for you to return from grocery shopping! The term ‘knockout’ refers to a process by which specific mouse genes have been de-activated, or knocked out. Capecchi, Evans and Smithie started off with changing the genetic information in single cells. Later, their technique matured to allow the injection of a genetically modified mouse embroyonic stem cell into a mouse blastocyst, which is then implanted into a surrogate mouse mother – and the embryo begins to develop. The resulting mice can have genes either ‘knocked out’ or added in.
Since the late 1980’s research labs have used ‘knock out’ mice to study the function of specific genes in these mice. As humans and mice share much of the same DNA genetic structure, this research is exteremely valuable for discovering causes and cures of many human genetic diseases. |
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