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Martin Rodbell - Profiles in Science
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Martin Rodbell
The Martin Rodbell Papers
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Early Work in Cellular Metabolism, 1956-1969
Signal Transduction and the Discovery of G-Proteins, 1969-1980
Cells as "Programmable Messengers," 1981-1994
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Martin Rodbell age 3 years
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Martin Rodbell playing beneath a gun turret
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Martin Rodbell in Study of Rabbi Israel 'Bar-Mitzvah Boy'
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[Entry from] Desk Private: Appointments - Memoranda - Reminders - Diary
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Marty [Rodbell] -- Bob Wolfe -- Neil Zierler [at Baltimore City College]
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Martin Rodbell in a Navy uniform
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Mart[in] in Navy
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Martin Rodbell 22 years old
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Wedding Day. [Martin and Barbara Rodbell]
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The Relationship of Epinephrine and Glucagon to Liver Phosphorylase
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Martin Rodbell at the University of Brussels
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Mart[in] in Venice
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Martin Rodbell and Ann Butler Jones at NIH
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The Metabolism of Isolated Fat Cells: I. Effects of Hormones on Glucose Metabolism and Lipolysis
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Influence of Additions on Glucagon Binding
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ATP? or GTP
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Effect of Nucleotides
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Release of Glucagon -- I-125
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Martin Rodbell and Oscar H. Hechter at the 4th Capri (Italy) Conference
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Martin Rodbell at the 4th Capri (Italy) Conference
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Participants in the 1970 Gordon Research Conference on Hormone Action, New London, New Hampshire
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The Glucagon-Sensitive Adenyl Cyclase System in Plasma Membranes of Rat Liver: II. Comparison Between Glucagon- and Fluoride-Stimulated Activities
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The Glucagon-Sensitive Adenyl Cyclase System in Plasma Membranes of Rat Liver: IV. Effects of Guanyl Nucleotides on Binding of 125 I-Glucagon
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The Glucagon-Sensitive Adenyl Cyclase System in Plasma Membranes of Rat Liver: V. An Obligatory Role of Guanyl Nucleotides in Glucagon Action
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The Glucagon-Sensitive Adenyl Cyclase System in Plasma Membranes of Rat Liver: III. Binding of Glucagon: Method of Assay and Specificity
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The Glucagon-Sensitive Adenyl Cyclase System in Plasma Membranes of Rat Liver: I. Properties
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Letter from Martin Rodbell to Anil Joshi
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5'-Guanylylimidodiphosphate, A Potent Activator of Adenylate Cyclase Systems in Eukaryotic Cells
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Martin Rodbell with beard
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GTP Stimulates and Inhibits Adenylate Cyclase in Fat Cell Membranes through Distinct Regulatory Processes
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The Fat Cell Adenylate Cyclase System: Characterization and Manipulation of Its Biomodal Regulation by GTP
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Letter from Martin Rodbell to Peter F. Hall
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The Role of Hormone Receptors and GTP-Regulatory Proteins in Membrane Transduction
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Letter from Martin Rodbell to Andre DeLean
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Martin Rodbell at the University of Geneva
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Gairdner Lecture: Introduction
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Martin Rodbell
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Signal Transduction in Biological Membranes
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Farewell to Somerset, Hello Chapel Hill
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The Final Farewell or The Last Ode from Building 6
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Programmable Messengers: A New Theory of Hormone Action
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Signal Transduction: A Twenty Year History of G-Proteins
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Figure 4: Late 1970 Model of the Glucagon-Sensitive Liver Membrane Adenylyl Cyclase As an Information Transfer System
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Fig[ure]. 6: 1984 Model of Adenylyl Cyclase System Susceptible to Both Stimulatory and Inhibitory Regulation
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Fig[ure]. 1: 1967 Conceptualization of an Hormone-Sensitive Adenylyl Cyclase
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Fig[ure]. 5: 1977 Model of Hormonal Stimulation of an Adenylyl Cyclase System
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Fig[ure]. 3: Early 1970 Representation of the Hormone Sensitive Adenylyl Cyclase As a System Formed of Three Functional Elements: Discriminator, Transducer, and Amplifier
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Fig[ure]. 2: 1969 Conceptualization of Adenylyl Cyclase System Stimulated by Multiple Hormones
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Getting the Message Across
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The Beginnings of an Endocrinologist
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