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  1. 1 de nov. de 2002 · As a result of his efforts to isolate the Rous sarcoma virus, he then — in conjunction with the Canadian-born developmental biologist Keith Porter ( Fig. 1 ), George Hogeboom and Walter ...

    • Alan M. Tartakoff
    • 2002
  2. Porter's colleagues Albert Claude, Christian de Duve and George E. Palade were awarded a Nobel Prize in 1974 "for describing the structure and function of organelles in biological cells", work that Porter is also well known for.

    • Canadian, American
    • Cell biologist
  3. www.nature.com › articles › ncb1208-1374Obituary - Nature

    George Palade 1912–2008 George Emil Palade, universally hailed as the founder of modern cell biol - ... tory of Albert Claude at the Rockefeller Institute, who with Keith Porter and

    • David D Sabatini
    • 2008
  4. George Palade. George Emil Palade ( Iaşi, 19 de noviembre de 1912- Del Mar, 8 de octubre de 2008) fue un biólogo celular nacido en Rumanía y naturalizado estadounidense. Fue miembro de la facultad de la Universidad Carol Davila de Bucarest hasta 1945, cuando fue a Estados Unidos por estudios postdoctorales. Ahí, se unió con su profesor ...

    • George E. Palade
  5. 1950s with Albert Claude and Keith Porter at what is now Rockefeller University, Palade focused on membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and elucidated the basis of protein synthesis and secretion. Palades work in the 1950s established the ribosome as the seat of protein synthesis in the cytoplasm. In the 1950s and 1960s, he teamed

  6. 3 de nov. de 2008 · Palade, along with Keith Porter and others at the Rockefeller, was a founder of the American Society for Cell Biology in 1960, with approximately 230 members at its first meeting in Chicago. The ASCB has grown to a membership of approximately 10,000, indicative of current activity in the field.

  7. 5 de abr. de 2010 · Keith Porter and George Palade, who at the Rockefeller Institute were makingtrailblazing discoveries with the electron microscope on the identification andstructure of subcellular organelles, were among the many who appreciatedSiekevitz’s development of an in vitro protein-synthesizing system.