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Examples
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In a triumphant press release, 454 crowed that its success “marks the first time that a new method has been used to sequence a whole genome since Walter Gilbert and Frederick Sanger won the Nobel Prize in 1980 for the invention of DNA sequencing.”
The $1,000 Genome Kevin Davies 2010
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Frederick Sanger played a seminal role in initiating such developments.
Molecular Biology Darden, Lindley 2009
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Despite the promise of Church's multiplexing system, the HGP instead used a more established instrument manufactured by Applied Biosystems, based on a technique developed by biochemist Frederick Sanger.
How the Personal Genome Project Could Unlock the Mysteries of Life 2008
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In 1980 he shared half of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry with the team of Walter Gilbert and Frederick Sanger for their contributions to basic research in nucleic acids.
Protein synthesis: a famous film | The Blog of Michael R. Eades, M.D. 2007
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The problem of determining the exact arrangements in the actual molecule of insulin obtained from the ox pancreas, out of all the possibilities that could exist, was tackled by a group headed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger.
The Human Brain Asimov, Isaac 1963
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The automated "reading" of DNA sequences -- the paired strands of nucleotides, or bases, that make up our genetic alphabet -- had long depended on a chemical process developed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger back in 1977.
Penn State Live 2010
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The automated "reading" of DNA sequences -- the paired strands of nucleotides, or bases, that make up our genetic alphabet -- had long depended on a chemical process developed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger back in 1977.
Penn State Live 2010
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The automated "reading" of DNA sequences -- the paired strands of nucleotides, or bases, that make up our genetic alphabet -- had long depended on a chemical process developed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger back in 1977.
Penn State Live 2010
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The automated "reading" of DNA sequences -- the paired strands of nucleotides, or bases, that make up our genetic alphabet -- had long depended on a chemical process developed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger back in 1977.
PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories 2010
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The automated "reading" of DNA sequences -- the paired strands of nucleotides, or bases, that make up our genetic alphabet -- had long depended on a chemical process developed by the British biochemist Frederick Sanger back in 1977.
Penn State Live 2010
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