Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

The Museum uses a variety of methods such as virtual and physical exhibits, social media, and publications to make this history available to the public and to historical researchers. 

Carousel Container
parametervalue

Carousel Page
imagepotter-banner.jpg
headingCuriosity & Collaboration:
tabtextMichael Potter Virtual Exhibit
parametervalue
linktextThe Work of Michael Potter (1924-2013)
targethttps://history.nih.gov/exhibits/potter/index.html

Carousel Page
imageanfinsen-banner1.png
headingChristian Boehmer Anfinsen
tabtextChristian Anfinsen Virtual Exhibit
linktextProtein Folding and the Nobel Prize
targethttps://history.nih.gov/exhibits/anfinsen/index.html

Carousel Page
imageNIH_History1.png
headingSocial Media
tabtextMonthly Social Media Campaign
parametervalue
linktext@HistoryatNIH
targethttps://www.nih.gov/news-events/social-media-outreach#history

Carousel Page
imageNIH_oral-histories.png
headingOral Histories
tabtextOral Histories
parametervalue
linktextNIH Interview Archives
targetOral Histories

Div
classusa-section usa-section-dark usa-graphic_list
Div
classusa-grid usa-graphic_list-row
Div
classusa-width-one-half usa-media_block

potter icon

Div
classusa-media_block-body

Michael Potter Exhibit

“In the 1950s, a ferment of new theoretical ideas on the cellular and genetic basis of antibody formation electrified the field of immunology and began a new age in experimentation.  Two problems dominated the thoughts of scientists during most of this decade—the cellular basis of antibody formation (how did it work?) and the genetic basis of antibody diversity (how could the genes in one individual generate antibodies for the thousands and thousands of antigens?).  …The pace of research was remarkable. One bridge between fields such as immunology, cancer research, protein chemistry, and molecular biology was the plasma cell.”
  —Michael Potter “The Early History of Plasma Cell Tumors in Mice, 1954-1976.”

Span
classusa-button usa-button-big

The Work of Michael Potter (1924-2013)

Div
classusa-grid usa-graphic_list-row
Div
classusa-width-one-half usa-media_block

anfinsen icon

Div
classusa-media_block-body

Christian Boehmer Anfinsen

n the spring of 1959, a little-known biochemist at the National Heart Institute of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, named Christian Anfinsen, sent an ambitious manuscript to the respected academic publisher John Wiley & Sons. They were clearly impressed. The resulting book published just a few months later, titled The Molecular Basis of Evolution, was the first rigorous attempt to integrate the newly developing field of protein chemistry with the classical concepts of genetics. Anfinsen stated in his preface, that “Everyone in science must be interested in the evolutionary process as the central theme of biology.”

Span
classusa-button usa-button-big

Christian Boehmer Anfinsen Exhibit

Div
classusa-grid usa-graphic_list-row
Div
classusa-width-one-half usa-media_block

Oral History Icon

Div
classusa-media_block-body

Oral Histories

Maybe replavce image with a user macro in order to get the image class <img class="usa-media_block-img" src="/assets/img/circle-124.png" alt="Alt text">

Span
classusa-button usa-button-big

Oral Histories

Div
classusa-grid usa-graphic_list-row
Div
classusa-width-one-half usa-media_block

Social Media Icon

Div
classusa-media_block-body

Office of NIH History Social Media

The DeWitt Stetten, Jr., Museum of Medical Research

Loremipsum

Include Page
70 Acres of Science
70 Acres of Science

A journey into NIH's past…and present

Blog Posts
contentexcerpts
labelsnews

Social Media

Twitterhistory


Oral histories are added on a regular basis.

Include Page
Oral Histories
Oral Histories