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Dear all, Please assist in editing the article Matthias Hentze. Below you'll find amendments to the Research and External links section as well as two additional sections. Many thanks in advance for your help. --Princessella123 --Princessella123 (talk) 13:34, 13 July 2017 (UTC)
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In 1987, Hentze and his colleagues discovered Iron-responsive elements (IRE), the first regulatory elements to be identified within mature mammalian mRNA.[1] The Hentze research team has also made groundbreaking contributions to the understanding of translational control, which is now well-appreciated for its importance during development, for brain function, cancer, and other disorders. He is further credited for key discoveries in the field of iron metabolism and its diseases.
Hentze is or was a member of numerous international advisory boards, including the scientific advisory board and board of trustees of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (Berlin, Deutschland), the scientific advisory board of the Berlin Institute of Health (BIH/BIG),[7] the Istituto Nazionale Genetica Molecolare (INGM)[8] (Milan, Italy), the Centenary Institute[9] (Sydney, Australia) and the Cold Spring Harbor Conferences Asia.[10] Furthermore, Hentze is a scientific co-founder of Anadys Pharmaceuticals (San Diego, USA).[11]
Hentze is co-author of textbooks on molecular medicine and has published over 250 original articles, including:
References
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