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  1. Oct 30, 2007 · Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg dies at 89. October 30, 2007 - By Mitzi Baker. L.A. Cicero. Arthur Kornberg (left) with his son, Roger, after Roger received the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Arthur Kornberg received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1959 for his work elucidating DNA assembly. Arthur Kornberg, winner of the 1959 Nobel ...

  2. Arthur Kornberg (March 3, 1918 – October 26, 2007) was an American biochemist who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1959 for the discovery of "the mechanisms in the biological synthesis of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid" together with Spanish biochemist and physician Severo Ochoa of New York University.

  3. Department of Molecular Biology, Graduate School of Biological Sciences, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Nara, Japan. smaki@bs.naist.jp. A tribute to Arthur Kornberg. Satoko Maki, with ...

  4. Biographical. Arthur Kornberg was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1918 and educated in its public schools. He received his undergraduate degree in science from the City College of New York in 1937 and the M.D. degree from the University of Rochester in 1941. After a year’s internship in internal medicine, he served as a commissioned officer in ...

  5. From Physician to Enzyme Hunter, 1942-1953. When ship's doctor Arthur Kornberg was reassigned to a research post at the National Institute of Health (NIH)--now the National Institutes of Health--in 1942, he did not expect to stay there beyond the end of World War II. He had no formal research qualifications, apart from his small medical school ...

  6. Arthur Kornberg. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1959 was awarded jointly to Severo Ochoa and Arthur Kornberg "for their discovery of the mechanisms in the biological synthesis of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid". MLA style: The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1959. NobelPrize.org. Nobel Prize Outreach AB 2024.

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  8. Nov 16, 2007 · Forty years ago, a Japanese press release issued on the occasion of a visit by Arthur Kornberg called him the “father of life in a test tube.” This was in reference to his laboratory's 1967 feat of copying single-stranded circular DNA into a replicative form and then back to an infectious viral DNA strand using purified DNA polymerase and DNA ligase (Figure 1, left panel). Although a ...

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