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THE KNOWABLE
NATURE OF SCIENTIFIC TRUTH
Roger Kornberg, Nobel Laureate 2006
(Chemistry)
Stanford University
Medical School
Department of Structural
Biology
Fairchild Building - 1st floor
299 Campus Dr. Stanford CA, 94305-5126, USA
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BA from Harvard
College in 1967 and PhD in
Chemistry from Stanford University in 1972, Prof. Roger Kornberg
is Winzer Professor in Medicine in the Department
of Structural Biology at Stanford University.
In his doctoral research, he demonstrated the diffusional
motions of lipids in membranes, termed flip-flop and lateral diffusion.
He was a postdoctoral fellow and member of the scientific staff at the
Laboratory of Molecular Biology in
Cambridge, England
from 1972-5, where he discovered the nucleosome, the
basic unit of DNA coiling in chromosomes. He moved to his present
position in 1978, where his research has focused on the mechanism and
regulation of eukaryotic gene
transcription. Notable
findings include the demonstration of the role of nucleosomes
in transcriptional regulation, the establishment of a yeast RNA polymerase II transcription system
and the
isolation of all the proteins involved, the discovery of the Mediator of transcriptional regulation, the development
of two-dimensional protein crystallization and its application to transcription proteins, and the atomic structure
determination of an RNA polymerase II transcribing complex.
Prof. Kornberg was elected to the National Academy of Sciences
in 1993. He has received many
awards, including the 2001 Welch prize, highest award in chemistry in the United States, the 2002 Leopold
Mayer Prize, highest award
in biomedical sciences of the French Academy of Sciences, and the
2006 Nobel Prize
in Chemistry (unshared). Kornberg’s
closest collaborator has been his wife, Dr. Yahli Lorch. They have three children, Guy, Maya, and
Gil.
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