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  1. Jan 1, 2014 · Frederick Sanger (1918–2013) John Walker 1 ... (MRC) to build the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, which opened in 1962. Here, Sanger spent the rest of his active scientific life. ...

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  2. Dec 16, 2013 · Frederick (Fred) Sanger, who died on 19th November 2013, was one of the most influential scientists of the 20th century. A committed molecular biologist, he spent all his academic life in Cambridge devising methods for sequencing proteins and nucleic acids. He twice won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry: once in 1958 for protein sequencing, and then again in 1980 for sequencing nucleic acids. The ...

    • George G. Brownlee
    • 2013
  3. Jan 17, 2014 · Fred Sanger was a remarkable and unique scientist, and with his passing on 19 November 2013 we have lost one of the founders of molecular biology. He won two Nobel Prizes for chemistry, but we claim him for molecular biology because the methods he developed for sequencing proteins and nucleic acids provide the basis for much of what we do today.

    • Sydney Brenner
    • 2014
  4. By 1951, Sanger was on the staff of the Medical Research Council at Cambridge University. In 1962, he moved with the Medical Research Council to the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge where Francis Crick, John Kendrew, Aaron Klug and others were all working on a DNA-related problem. Solving the problem of DNA sequencing became a ...

  5. Without any doubt, based on his quiet work and significant accomplishments, Fred Sanger is regarded as one of the fathers of both modern proteomics and genomics. However, Fred preferred working at the bench and encouraged others to do likewise. His Quaker upbringing was revealed by his quiet determination, his modesty, and his focus on excellence.

  6. Apr 23, 2009 · Fred Sanger, the inventor of the first protein, RNA and DNA sequencing methods, has traditionally been seen as a technical scientist, engaged in laboratory bench work and not interested at all in intellectual debates in biology. In his autobiography and commentaries by fellow researchers, he is portrayed as having a trajectory exclusively dependent on technological progress. The scarce ...

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  8. Frederick Sanger OM CH CBE FRS FAA (/ ˈ s æ ŋ ər /; 13 August 1918 – 19 November 2013) was a British biochemist who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice.. He won the 1958 Chemistry Prize for determining the amino acid sequence of insulin and numerous other proteins, demonstrating in the process that each had a unique, definite structure; this was a foundational discovery for the ...

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