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      • Swiss microbiologist whose discovery that enzymes break large pieces of DNA into smaller, manageable pieces led to a revolution in genetics research.
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  2. Werner Arber and his contributions to microbiology | Britannica. Home Health & Medicine Medicine Physicians. Werner Arber Article. Werner Arber summary. Learn about Werner Arber and his contribution to the discovery and use of restriction enzymes that break the giant molecules of DNA into manageable pieces. Written and fact-checked by.

  3. My first contribution to our journal club concerned Watson and Crick’s papers on the structure of DNA. In the 1950’s the Biophysics Laboratory at the University of Geneva was lucky enough to receive each summer for several months the visit of Jean Weigle. He was the former professor of experimental physics at the University of Geneva.

  4. Werner Arber is a Swiss microbiologist and geneticist who together with Daisy Dussoix helped discover and understand the mechanism of restriction enzymes, laying the foundation for their adoption as molecular scissors.

    • Granichen, Switzerland
  5. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1978 was awarded jointly to Werner Arber, Daniel Nathans and Hamilton O. Smith "for the discovery of restriction enzymes and their application to problems of molecular genetics"

  6. Dec 18, 2014 · Arber: This functioning has been shown with small DNA molecules, and it is indeed wonderful. In the presence of the type I enzyme, each time you bring in a foreign DNA, it gets cut at a different place because the recognitions at different specificity sites are not synchronous.

    • Jane Gitschier
    • 2014
  7. As professor of Molecular Biology from 1971 to 1996, Werner Arber was one of the founding professors, active in research and teaching at the Biozentrum. In 1978 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

  8. views 3,350,527 updated. Werner Arber. 1929- Swiss microbiologist whose discovery that enzymes break large pieces of DNA into smaller, manageable pieces led to a revolution in genetics research.

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