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Peter Agre (/ ˈ ɑː ɡ r iː /; born January 30, 1949) is an American physician, Nobel Laureate, and molecular biologist, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and director of the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute.
Peter Agre – American medical doctor, professor, and molecular biologist; Neal Amundson – (1916–2011) American chemical engineer; John August Anderson – (1876–1959) American astronomer. The crater Anderson on the Moon is named after him; Erik Asphaug – American planetary scientist, winner of Urey Prize
Paul Bruce Beeson (d.); Ivan Loveridge Bennett (d.); Julius H. Comroe Jr. (d.) Jerome W. Conn (d.); Rashi Fein (d.); Robert J. Glaser (d.); Robert A. Good (d.); Leon ...
Peter Agre: Chemistry 2003 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine: Isamu Akasaki: Physics 2014 Meijo University: Nagoya University: George Akerlof: Economics 2001 University of California, Berkeley: Kurt Alder: Chemistry 1950 University of Cologne: Zhores Alferov: Physics 2000 Ioffe Institute: Hannes Alfvén: Physics 1970 KTH Royal Institute of ...
Peter Agre (vice chancellor for science and technology at Duke University Medicine Center from 2005 to December 2007), 2003 Nobel laureate in chemistry [9] [10] Robert Lefkowitz (James B. Duke Professor of Medicine and Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry, joined Duke in 1973), 2012 Nobel laureate in Chemistry. [11] National Medal of Science ...
Peter Agre, recipient of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, was recognized with the Will Rogers Institute Annual Prize for Research in 2008 for his discovery of aquaporins: proteins that allow water molecules to cross biological membranes, and thereby play a vitally important role in epithelial physiology (including the physiology of pulmonary ...
Jennie Garth and Peter Facinelli were married for nearly 11 years before they eventually went their separate ways. The twosome — who met on the set of 1996’s An Unfinished Affair — tied the ...
Peter Agre was awarded the 2003 prize "for the discovery of water channels". Agre published his study about aquaporin in 1988; Gheorghe Benga had showed the existence of a protein water channel in the red blood cell membrane in 1986. [36] [37] The omission of Benga from the 2003 prize has been called a mistake in the awarding of Nobel Prizes.