Gallery 21: Mahlon Hoagland, 1999

Mahlon Hoagland at his home in Vermont, 1999.

Mahlon Hoagland

  • ID: 16475
  • Source: DNALC.DNAFTB

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16474. Gallery 21: Mahlon Hoagland and Ernest Borek, 1966

1966 Cold Spring Harbor Symposium. Mahlon Hoagland (R) in discussion with Ernest Borek (L).

  • ID: 16474
  • Source: DNAFTB

15885. Cell-free extracts

Paul Zamecnik first developed the cell-free extract system, which Marshall Nirenberg adapted to decipher the genetic code. Paul Zamecnik and Mahlon Hoagland also isolated activated tRNA, the "adaptor" that shuttled amino acids to ribsomes for incorporati

  • ID: 15885
  • Source: DNAi

16490. Biography 21: Mahlon Hoagland (1921- )

Paul Zamecnik developed a cell-free extract that he and Mahlon Hoagland used to study protein synthesis. They identified tRNA as the adaptor predicted by Francis Crick in his Central Dogma

  • ID: 16490
  • Source: DNAFTB

15001. Paul Zamecnik

Paul Zamecnik photo

  • ID: 15001
  • Source: DNAi

16489. Biography 21: Paul Charles Zamecnik (1913-2009)

Paul Zamecnik developed a cell-free extract that he and Mahlon Hoagland used to study protein synthesis. They identified tRNA as the adaptor predicted by Francis Crick in his Central Dogma

  • ID: 16489
  • Source: DNALC.DNAFTB

16471. Animation 21: RNA is an intermediary between DNA and protein.

Francis Crick describes RNA and its role and Paul Zamecnick explains protein synthesis.

  • ID: 16471
  • Source: DNALC.DNAFTB

16391. Biography 17: Oswald Theodore Avery (1877-1955)

In 1944, Oswald Avery and his colleagues, Colin MacLeod and Maclyn McCarty published their landmark paper on the transforming ability of DNA.

  • ID: 16391
  • Source: DNAFTB