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Skermanella – Victor B. D. Skerman, an Australian bacteriologist and taxonomist; Skermania – Victor B. D. Skerman, an Australian bacteriologist and taxonomist; Slackia – Geoffrey Slack, a British microbiologist and dental researcher; Smithella – Paul H. Smith, an American microbiologist; Sneathia – P. H. A. Sneath, a British ...
Acinetobacter baumannii is a typically short, almost round, rod-shaped (coccobacillus) Gram-negative bacterium.It is named after the bacteriologist Paul Baumann. [2] It can be an opportunistic pathogen in humans, affecting people with compromised immune systems, and is becoming increasingly important as a hospital-derived infection.
Sahachirō Hata (秦 佐八郎, Hata Sahachirō, March 23, 1873 – November 22, 1938) was a prominent Japanese bacteriologist who researched the bubonic plague under Kitasato Shibasaburō and assisted in developing the antisyphilitic drug arsphenamine in 1909 in the laboratory of Paul Ehrlich.
William Erwin Paul (June 12, 1936 – September 18, 2015) was an American immunologist. [2] He and Maureen Howard discovered interleukin 4 , [ 3 ] [ 4 ] while an independent team led by Ellen Vitetta did the same in 1982.
Paul Berg (1926–2023), American biochemist known for work on gene splicing of recombinant DNA. Hans Berger (1873–1941), German neuroscientist, one of the founders of electroencephalography; Carl Bergmann (1814–1865), German anatomist, physiologist and biologist who developed Bergmann's rule relating population and body sizes with ambient ...
Paul Theodor Uhlenhuth (7 January 1870 in Hanover – 13 December 1957 in Freiburg im Breisgau) was a German bacteriologist and immunologist, and Professor at the University of Strasbourg (1911–1918), at the University of Marburg (1918–1923) and at the University of Freiburg (1923–1936). He was a rector of the University of Freiburg from ...
Paul Ehrlich (German: [ˈpaʊl ˈʔeːɐ̯lɪç] ⓘ; 14 March 1854 – 20 August 1915) was a Nobel Prize-winning German physician and scientist who worked in the fields of hematology, immunology and antimicrobial chemotherapy.
Williams was born in Omaha, Nebraska, [6] the son of Paul Hamilton Williams, an architectural engineer, and his wife, Bertha Mae (née Burnside), a homemaker. [1]One of his brothers was John J. Williams, a NASA rocket scientist, who participated in the Mercury and Apollo programs and was awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal, their highest honor, in 1969. [7]