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  1. Günter Blobel (German pronunciation: [ˈɡʏntɐ ˈbloːbl̩] ⓘ; May 21, 1936 – February 18, 2018) was a Silesian German and American biologist and 1999 Nobel Prize laureate in Physiology for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell.

  2. Apr 24, 2024 · Günter Blobel (born May 21, 1936, Waltersdorf, Silesia, Germany [now Niegosławice, Poland]—died February 18, 2018, New York, New York, U.S.) was a German-born American cellular and molecular biologist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1999 for his discovery that proteins have signals that govern their movement ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Mar 28, 2018 · Günter Blobel, recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, died on 18 February 2018 aged 81. He was among the greatest scientists of the twentieth century, whose seminal work on ...

    • André Hoelz
    • hoelz@caltech.edu
    • 2018
  4. Feb 19, 2018 · Günter Blobel was born on May 21, 1936, in the Silesian village of Waltersdorf, then in eastern Germany and later part of Poland. He was one of eight children of Bruno and Margaret Blobel.

  5. Mar 23, 2018 · Günter Blobel (1936–2018) Biologist who decoded how proteins are sorted in cells. For much of the twentieth century, biologists puzzled over how the proteins that build, run and leave cells ...

    • Sanford Simon
    • 2018
  6. Günter Blobel, a Nobel Prize-winning Rockefeller biologist who discovered the mechanisms by which proteins are targeted for delivery to specific locations within cells, died February 18 at 81. Blobel joined the Rockefeller faculty 51 years ago; he was the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Professor and had been a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator since 1986. […]

  7. Apr 5, 2018 · When Günter Blobel died on February 18th, the world lost an innovative thinker and superb experimentalist who ushered cell biology into the molecular age. He left new paradigms that continue to inform our understanding of how cells work, a legion of trainees who continue to transform science, and a legacy of accomplishments as a global citizen. Debonair and jovial, he had a ferocious passion ...

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