PREVIOUS LECTURES

ZICKLER LECTURERS
2008

Dr. Arnold J. Levine


The Simons Center for Systems Biology
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ

The p53 pathway: Cancer, Fertility, Metabolic Control and the Central Nervous System

2004

Dr. Jan H. J. Hoeijmakers


MGC, Department of Cell Biology & Genetics
Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

'Save your genes'
The impact of DNA damage and repair on cancer and aging
2002

Dr. Robert F. Furchgott, Nobel Laureate


Department of Physiology and Pharmacology
SUNY Health Sciences Center, Brooklyn, NY


The Importance of Accidental Discoveries in Research Leading to Nitric Oxide

2001

Martin C. Raff, M.D.


University College London, UK


Timing and Cell Number Control in Neural Development

1999

Joseph L. Goldstein, M.D., Nobel Laureate


University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center


A Proteolytic Pathway that Controls the Cholesterol Content of Membranes, Cells, and Blood

1997

Alfred G. Gilman, M.D., Ph.D., Nobel Laureate


University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center


G Proteins and Regulation of Adenylyl Cyclase

1996

Sir James Black, FRS, FRCP, Nobel Laureate


Kings College, London


Gastrin/Cholecystokinin Receptors

1995

Dirk Bootsma, Ph.D.


Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands


DNA Repair: Maintaining Nature's Perfection

1994

Leroy E. Hood, M.D., Ph.D.


University of Washington, Seattle


Analysis of the Human & Mouse Loci: Mapping, Sequencing, Computation, & Biological Consequence

1993

Sydney Brenner, Ph.D., Nobel Laureate


Cambridge University


Analysis of Genomes

1992

Victor A. McKusick, M.D.


Johns Hopkins University


The Human Genome Project: Background, Status, Prospects, Implications

1990

Har Gobind Khorana, Ph.D., Nobel Laureate


Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Light Transduction by Bacteriorhodopsin andVisual Rhodopsin

1989

Howard M. Temin, Ph.D., Nobel Laureate


McArdle Laboratory, University of Wisconsin


Retrovirus Evolution and Variation

1988

Daniel Nathans, M.D., Nobel Laureate


Johns Hopkins University


Genomic Response to Growth Factor