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  1. David Baltimore (2013) David Baltimore (* 7.März 1938 in New York, USA) ist ein US-amerikanischer Mikrobiologe und Virologe.Er ist einer der Wegbereiter der Gentechnik und arbeitet am California Institute of Technology (Caltech). 1975 erhielt er zusammen mit Renato Dulbecco und Howard M. Temin den Nobelpreis für Physiologie oder Medizin „für ihre Entdeckungen auf dem Gebiet der ...

  2. David Baltimore (born March 7, 1938) is an American biologist, university administrator, and 1975 Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine. He is a professor of biology at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), where he served as president from 1997 to 2006. [2]

  3. David Baltimore shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Renato Dulbecco and Howard Temin for their discoveries on tumor viruses and reverse transcriptase. Learn more about his work, affiliation, prize motivation and citation on NobelPrize.org.

  4. David Baltimore, American virologist who shared the 1975 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Howard M. Temin and Renato Dulbecco. Working independently, Baltimore and Temin discovered reverse transcriptase. Such research contributed to an understanding of the role of viruses in the development of cancer.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 1973-present. American Cancer Society Professor of Microbiology. From Les Prix Nobel en 1975, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1976. This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/ Nobel Lectures / The Nobel Prizes.

  6. David Baltimore was born in New York City on March 7, 1938, Baltimore decided on a career in biological research while spending a high-school summer at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. After earning his B.A. in chemistry with high honors from Swarthmore College in 1960, he studied biophysics at the Massachusetts Institute of ...

  7. David Baltimore: There was a presentation at a Gordon conference in the summer of 197-, I think it’s -74 it may be -73, that Maxine Singer had been involved, I think she’d organised the meeting and she wrote a letter to the National Academy of Sciences along with the other co-organiser of the meeting Dieter Söll saying that at this meeting it had been announced that it was possible to put ...