salvador edward luria

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الفرنسية - الإنجليزية
Salvador Edward Luria (1912-1991), Italian born U.S. biologist who shared the 1969 Nobel Prize for medicine, or physiology for research on the mechanisms and materials of inheritance of viruses
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
{i} (1912-1991) Italian born U.S. microbiologist who shared the 1969 Nobel Prize (with Max Delbruck and Alfred Hershey) for medicine or physiology for research on the mechanisms and materials of inheritance of viruses
born Aug. 13, 1912, Turin, Italy died Feb. 6, 1991, Lexington, Mass., U.S. Italian-born U.S. biologist. He fled Italy for France in 1938, arriving in the U.S. in 1940. In 1942 he obtained an electron micrograph of phage particles that confirmed earlier descriptions of them as consisting of a round head and a thin tail. In 1943 he and Max Delbrück showed that viruses can undergo permanent changes in their hereditary material. He also proved that the simultaneous existence of phage-resistant bacteria with phage-sensitive bacteria in the same culture was a result of the selection of spontaneous bacterial mutants. In 1945 he and A.D. Hershey demonstrated the existence not only of such bacterial mutants but also of spontaneous phage mutants. The three men shared a 1969 Nobel Prize
الإنجليزية - الفرنسية
{n} Salvador Edward Luria (1912-1991), biochimiste américain d'origine italienne, partagea le Prix Nobel de médecine (1969) avec Alfred Day Hershey et Max Delbrück, pour ses travaux sur la génétique bactérienne et la biologie des phages