- #Nobel winner Blackburn’s 2004 #PLoS Biology essay: Reason as Our Guide –http://shar.es/140kQ3 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
- #Nobel winner Greider’s re #PLoS Genetics pub on telomeres in Primary and Tumor Cells –http://shar.es/140wf5 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
- #Nobel winner Szostak has many #PLoSOne pubshttp://tinyurl.com/yeel5sthttp://tinyurl.com/ycb34c5http://tinyurl.com/yegusbc7 minutes ago from web
- Yippe – another Nobel Prize for work in Tetrahymena – see my #PLoS Biology paper on the genome here –http://shar.es/140hE12 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
- The Greider Lab | Johns Hopkins Medicine –http://shar.es/1406w #Nobel14 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
- Blackburn Lab Research – http://shar.es/140G9#Nobel15 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
- Szostak Lab: Home Page http://shar.es/140G3#Nobel15 minutes ago from ShareThis.com
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This is from the “Tree of Life Blog”
of Jonathan Eisen, an evolutionary biologist and Open Access advocate
at the University of California, Davis. For short updates, follow me on Twitter.
——–
This is from the “Tree of Life Blog”
of Jonathan Eisen, an evolutionary biologist and Open Access advocate
at the University of California, Davis. For short updates, follow me on Twitter.
——–
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Author: Jonathan Eisen
I am an evolutionary biologist and a Professor at U. C. Davis. (see my lab site here). My research focuses on the origin of novelty (how new processes and functions originate). To study this I focus on sequencing and analyzing genomes of organisms, especially microbes and using phylogenomic analysis View all posts by Jonathan Eisen

Oh my FSM, I was JUST looking up Blackburn's Tetrahymena papers when blogging some musings about who knows how many cell/molecular biol wonders lie waiting to be discovered in the obscure domains of the protist kingdom. While looking at them, I thought “I wonder if she ever got a Nobel prize for that…”
Wow! I haz sixth sense!
Ok, maybe just a coincidence…
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