William Ferdinand Memorial Lectures
TBA Genome repair at atomic resolution The ABCC's of drug resistance and drug disposition Professor John Oxford St Bartholomews & The Royal London, April 19th 2005, the 24th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture The Ran GTPase as a signal of chromosome position in mitosis Professor Iain Mattaj EMBL April 27th 2004, the 23rd William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Analysing protein interactions: from complexes to large scale networks Prof Bertrand Seraphin CNRS, France March 6th 2003, the 22nd William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Converting the new biology into new drugs Prof. Peter Goodfellow GlaxoSmithKline November 8th 2001, the 21st William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Society and the human genome Sir John Sulston, FRS, Director, Sanger Centre October 26th 2000, the 20th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Membrane Fusion in virus infections Professor Sir John Skehel, FRS, National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill March 4th 1999, the 19th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Molecular Biology of Prion Diseases Professor John Collinge Imperial College February 12th 1998, the 18th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Those flipping methylases Dr R.J. Roberts, Nobel Laureate, New England Biolabs, USA February 6th 1997, the 17th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Novel Antibiotics Through Gene Shuffling Professor Sir David Hopwood, FRS, Genetics Department, John Innes Centre February 22nd 1996, the 16th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Putting Molecular Biology to Work: Some Examples in Biotechnology and Healthcare Professor K. Murray, FRS, Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Edinburgh March 16th 1995, the 15th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Primordial Germ Cells Professor A. McLaren, FRS, DBE Wellcome/CRC Institute of Cancer and Developmental Biology February 24th 1994, the 14th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture DNA Fingerprinting: approaches and applications Professor Alec Jeffries, FRS, University of Leicester, November 25th 1993, the 13th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Protein Structure and Drug Design Professor T L Blundell, FRS ICRF Unit of Structural Molecular Biology, Birkbeck College, University of London February 20th 1992, the 12th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Eucaryotic Cell Cycle Control Professor P Nurse, FRS, Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford February 28th 1991, the 11th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Protein Phosphorylation and bioregulation - an overview. Professor P. Cohen, FRS, Department of Biochemistry, University of Dundee March 1st 1990, the 10th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture The Development of Pattern and Form Professor L. Wolpert, FRS, Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology University of London February 23rd 1989, the 9th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture The human genome Professor S. Brenner, FRS, MRC Molecular Genetics Unit, Cambridge University of London March 10th 1988, the 8th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Cloned genes for membrane receptors and their interpretation Professor E A Barnard, FRS, MRC Molecular Neurobiology Unit, Cambridge February 19th 1987, the 7th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture The molecular genetics and evolution of the HLA-D Region Sir Walter Bodmer, FRS, Director of Research, Imperial Cancer Research Laboratories, London February 20th 1986, the 6th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture The structure of chromatin Dr A Klug, FRS, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge February 14th 1985, the 5th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Shapes and specificities in some extra-cellular structures Dr D A Rees, FRS, Director of the National Institute for Medical Research March 21st 1984, the 4th William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture New approaches to studying vertebrate neurodevelopment Professor M C Raff, FRS, University College, London February 22nd 1983, the 3rd William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture P-31 NMR ‘in vivo’ from bioenergetics to the clinic Dr G K Radda, FRS, University of Oxford March 3rd 1982, the 2nd William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture Nucleotide sequences in DNA Professor F Sanger, FRS, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge February 18th 1981, the 1st William Ferdinand Memorial Lecture |
