Saul Roseman

Saul Roseman (born 9 March 1921 in Brooklyn, New York City; died 2 July 2011) was an American biochemist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Among many discoveries related to carbohydrate biochemistry,[1][2][3] he discovered the phosphotransferase system in bacteria.[4]

Awards

gollark: Just take `x << 3 + x << 1` or something like that, unless it has something faster; you don't need some ultrahyperfast algorithm.
gollark: What? It's multiplication by a constant. This is stupid.
gollark: Alpine Linux will fit onto way less fine.
gollark: One of my VPSes boots off a 768MB disk, although it's tight.
gollark: What language do you intend to use?

References

  1. "Biography of Professor Dr. Saul Roseman". Glycoconjugate Journal. 20 (1): 7. 2003. doi:10.1023/B:GLYC.0000016750.06379.10. ISSN 0282-0080.
  2. Simoni, Robert D. (2011-11-08). "Saul Roseman: His many contributions to biochemistry over eight decades". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (45): 18219–18220. Bibcode:2011PNAS..10818219S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1116475108. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 3215078. PMID 22032927.
  3. Schnaar, R. L.; Jourdian, G. W. (2011-11-01). "Obituary: Saul Roseman, 1921-2011". Glycobiology. 21 (11): 1393–1394. doi:10.1093/glycob/cwr132. ISSN 0959-6658. PMID 21994330.
  4. Kundig W, Roseman S (1971) Sugar transport. I. Isolation of a phosphotransferase system from Escherichia coli. J Biol Chem 246:1393–1406.
  5. Book of Members 1780–Present (PDF, 159 kB) der American Academy of Arts and Sciences (amacad.org)
  6. Past Rosenstiel Awards, Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center – Brandeis University
  7. Saul Roseman, Ph.D. of the Gairdner Foundation (gairdner.org)


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