Talk:Howard Martin Temin
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[edit]There is an error in this page:
The concept of reverse transcription did not contradict the "Central Dogma" as origionally postulated by F. Crick in 1958, but rather the version of the "Central Dogma" proposed by J.D. Watson in 1958. Crick's theory allowed for the flow of sequntial information to flow back and forth between DNA and RNA, while Watson's version was unidirectional, preventing the flow of sequential infromation from RNA to DNA. Crick sent a letter to the academic jounal "Nature" to clear up this misconception in 1970 when this mistake was first made.
My resources for this information are: Crick, F., 1958 On Protein Synthesis. Symposia of the Society for Experimental Biology 12, pp. 138-167
Crick, F., 1970. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology. Nature 277, pp 561-563
Watson, J. D., 1965. Molecular Biology of the Gene, first Edition (New York: W. A. Benjamin) 24.131.83.14 09:26, 22 February 2007 (UTC)A Concerned Historian of Biology
I changed the age from 50 to 59, as there was a mistake (he was born 1934 and died 1994).
The article about Temin contains the following proposition:
"Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a long-time advocate against smoking, Temin died at the age of 59 from lung cancer, although he himself was never a smoker."
Is this information confirmed by a source? --WAL 11:03, 26 April 2006 (UTC)
- I don't have a cite at hand for you, but this is correct. The sad irony of a non-smoking cancer researcher dying from lung cancer was noted at the time. It should be possible to find a reference for this. 165.189.91.148 18:34, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
Bachelors
[edit]The article currently says that Temin received his Bachelors from Swarthmore. But Temin attended Central High School (Philadelphia), and through an oddity of history, Central actually gives out Bachelors degrees when people complete high school there, so the Swarthmore Bachelor's would have been his second one; I'm going to change the wording to be more ambiguous rather than explain the nuances of Central's degrees (which has changed over time).
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