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Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Creative Media Partners, LLC Sep 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 1014050391 ISBN 13: 9781014050397
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
Verlag: Science, 1950., No place:, 1950
Anbieter: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Neuchatel, NEUCH, Schweiz
4to. 122-123 pp. Figs. Self-wraps. Ownership rubber stamp & signature of Norman Horowitz, California Institute of Technology. Fine. Barratt was a prominent player in the early development of fungal genetics. He was Tatum's first graduate student at Yale, and his detailed work on Neurospora provided the backbone for many later developments in genetics. He went on to work with the Dept. of Biological Sciences, Stanford University. Tatum (1909-1975) was one of the fathers of modern genetics and worked extensively with George W. Beadle on drosophila and Neurospora. This work culminated in the 1958 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine, which Tatum shared with Beadle and Joshua Lederberg. WITH: BARRATT, & Laura GARNJOBST. "Genetics of a Colonial Microcondiating Mutant Strain of Neurospora Crassa." Offprint from: Genetics, 34, 1949. 8vo. 351-369 pp. 1 color plate, figs., photos. Self-wraps. Ownership signature of Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT, R. Clinton FULLER, & Stuart W. TANENBAUM. "Amino Acid Interrelationships in Certain Leucine-and-Aromatic-Requiring Strains of Neurospora Crassa." Offprint from: Journal of Bacteriology, vol. 71, no. 1, 1956. 8vo. 108-114 pp. Figs. Self-wraps. Ownership signature of Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT, et al. "Map Construction in Neurospora Crassa." Offprint from: Advances in Genetics, vol. VI, 1954. 8vo. 93 pp. Figs., tables. Self-wraps; first leaf loose but present, else fine. Ownership rubber stamp of Norman Horowitz. WITH: BARRATT, & W. N. STRICKLAND. "Purification and Characterization of a TPN-Specific Glutamic Acid Dehydrogenase from Neurospora Crassa." Offprint from: Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, vol. 102, no. 1, 1963. 8vo. 66-76 pp. Photos, figs. Self-wraps. Ownership signature of Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT, & William OGATA. "A Strain of Neurospora with an Alternative Requirement for Leucine or Aromatic Amino Acids." Offprint from: American Journal of Botany, vol. 41, no. 9, 1954. 4to. 763-771 pp. Figs. Printed wrappers. Ownership rubber stamp of Norman Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT, R. W. TUVESON, & D. J. WEST. "Allosteric Effects in Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate-Specific Glutamate Dehydrogenase from: Neurospora." Offprint from: Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 242, no. 9, 1967. 4to. 2134-2138 pp. Figs. Plain wrappers. Ownership signature of Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT, G. J. STINE, & W. N. STRICKLAND. "Methods of Protein Extraction from Neurospora Crassa." Offprint from: Canadian Journal of Microbiology, vol. 10, 1964. 8vo. 29-35 pp. Self-wraps. Ownership signature of Horowitz. Fine. WITH: BARRATT. Proposal for Genetic Nomenclature and Symbolism of Neurospora. 1952. 4to. Typed sheets. 11 pp. Fine. / Raymond Barratt "was a prominent player in the early development of fungal genetics. After early work with fungal plant pathogens at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, he switched to Neurospora and became Ed Tatum's first graduate student at Yale. When the Tatum lab moved to Stanford in 1948, Ray continued as a Research Fellow, conducting his own research, supervising the laboratory, and becoming a teacher, helper, and friend to all the new students and postdocs. During this period, he took the initiative in assigning gene names and formulating rules of genetic nomenclature for Neurospora and in bringing together genetic and phenotypic information on all the known genes into what might be called the first Neurospora compendium, which included the first comprehensive maps. In 1954 he went to Dartmouth as a faculty member. He organized the Fungal Genetics Stock Center (FGS C), gathering Neurospora mutant and wild-type strains, obtaining funding from NSF, perfecting preservation methods, and periodically publishing stock lists in the Neurospora Newsletter (now Fungal Genetics Newsletter)." /.