Michael Grunstein
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Grunstein (born 1946 in Romania) is a Distinguished Professor of Biological Chemistry at the Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
He obtained his BSc degree from McGill University in Montreal, and his PhD from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. He did his post-doctoral training at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, where he invented the colony hybridization screening technique for recombinant DNAs in David Hogness' laboratory.
Soon after coming to UCLA in 1975 he pioneered the genetic analysis of histones in yeast and showed for the first time that histones are regulators of gene activity in living cells.
He received the Massry Prize in 2003 (with Roger Kornberg and David Allis).
[edit] External links
Michael Grunstein's homepage http://mgwww.mbi.ucla.edu/