This year's Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award goes to John Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka for their contributions to our understanding of how to reprogram adult cells back to early embryonic states
Since he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2012, John Gurdon׳s remarkable contributions to biology have...
Medicine for their work on induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) and cloning. Shinya Yamanaka (Center...
A pluripotent stem cell represents one of the earliest stages of development of an embryo, when choi...
This year's Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award goes to John Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka for t...
The 2012 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology recognizes the architects of two of the great paradig...
Sir John Bertrand Gurdon (born 2 October 1933) is a British developmental embryologist. He is best k...
The two winners of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine share more than just this honor; t...
International audienceThis paper describes the genesis of discoveries that have allowed cell reprogr...
Cellular reprogramming was recently “crowned” with the award of the Nobel Prize to two of its ground...
It is extremely rare for a single experiment to be so impactful and timely that it shapes and foreca...
The discovery that phenotypic diversity among differentiated cells results from epigenetic and not g...
Transcription factor-induced reprogramming of specialized cells into other cell types and to pluripo...
Stem cells have been an endless source of fascination and controversy since Dolly the sheep was clon...
International audienceReprogramming is the ability to change the fate of a cell to another one. A sc...
AbstractThe advent of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has revolutionized the concept of cellu...
Since he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2012, John Gurdon׳s remarkable contributions to biology have...
Medicine for their work on induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) and cloning. Shinya Yamanaka (Center...
A pluripotent stem cell represents one of the earliest stages of development of an embryo, when choi...
This year's Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award goes to John Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka for t...
The 2012 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology recognizes the architects of two of the great paradig...
Sir John Bertrand Gurdon (born 2 October 1933) is a British developmental embryologist. He is best k...
The two winners of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine share more than just this honor; t...
International audienceThis paper describes the genesis of discoveries that have allowed cell reprogr...
Cellular reprogramming was recently “crowned” with the award of the Nobel Prize to two of its ground...
It is extremely rare for a single experiment to be so impactful and timely that it shapes and foreca...
The discovery that phenotypic diversity among differentiated cells results from epigenetic and not g...
Transcription factor-induced reprogramming of specialized cells into other cell types and to pluripo...
Stem cells have been an endless source of fascination and controversy since Dolly the sheep was clon...
International audienceReprogramming is the ability to change the fate of a cell to another one. A sc...
AbstractThe advent of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has revolutionized the concept of cellu...
Since he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2012, John Gurdon׳s remarkable contributions to biology have...
Medicine for their work on induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) and cloning. Shinya Yamanaka (Center...
A pluripotent stem cell represents one of the earliest stages of development of an embryo, when choi...