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*], (1910–1953), American, non-consenting subject of ] ] | *], (1910–1953), American, non-consenting subject of ] ] | ||
*Olatunde Isaac (Nigerian Biochemist) who worked on the Effects of ] seed flower on ] profile. | |||
== P == | == P == |
Revision as of 13:50, 6 December 2013
Articles about notable biochemists include:
Contents:A
- John E. Amoore, British, Biochemist who postulated the stereochemical theory of olfaction in 1952.
- Isaac Asimov, Russian-born American science fiction writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University
- William Astbury, (1898–1961), British, pioneer in applying X-ray crystallography to biological molecules such as proteins
B
- Boris Pavlovich Belousov (1893–1970), USSR, chemist/biophysicist, Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction.
- Konrad Emil Bloch, (1912–2000), German-American, 1964 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Paul D. Boyer, (born 1918), American, studies on ATP synthase, won the Nobel prize for chemistry in 1997
- Adrian John Brown, (1852–1920), British, pioneer in enzyme kinetics
- Eduard Buchner, (1860–1917), German, 1907 Nobel Prize in Chemistry see fermentation (biochemistry)
- Dean Burk (1904–1988), American, co-discoverer of biotin.
C
- Robert Corey, (1897–1971), American, co-discoverer of the alpha helix and beta sheet
- Carl Ferdinand Cori, (1896–1984), American, 1947 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, glycogen research.
- Gerty Cori, (1896–1957), American, 1947 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, glycogen research.
- Peter Coveney, UK, Computational molecular biology specialist.
- Robert K. Crane, (1919-2010), American, discovered sodium-glucose cotransport.
- Francis Crick, (1916–2004), British, discovered the double helical structure of DNA.
D
- Carl Peter Henrik Dam (1895–1976), Danish, 1943 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Revaz Dogonadze (1931–1985), Georgian, Co-author of the quantum-mechanical model of Enzyme Catalysis
- Jack Cecil Drummond FRS (1891–1952), isolation of Vitamin A, wartime advisor on nutrition
- Christian de Duve, (1917-2013), British-born Belgian, 1974 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
E
- Akira Endo, statins
- Donald Engelman, cancer research
- Elekofehinti Olusola Olalekan Solanum anguivi research
F
- Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat, (1910–1999), German/US, virus research.
- Rosalind Franklin, (1920–1958), X-ray crystallographer who helped determine the structure of DNA
- Kazimierz Funk, (1884–1967), Polish, see Vitamin
G
- David E. Green, (1910–1983) pioneer in the study of enzymes, particularly those involved in oxidative phosphorylation.
- Walter Greiling, (1900–1986), German, worked in the field of agricultural microbiology.
- Frederick Griffith, (1879–1941), British, discovered that DNA carried hereditary information.
- Walter Gilbert, (born 1932), American, 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, molecular biologist, see also Biogen
H
- John Scott Haldane, (1860–1936), British, physiologist.
- Dorothy Hodgkin, (1910–1994), British, founder of protein crystallography and Nobel Prize winner
- Frederick Gowland Hopkins, (1861–1947), British, Nobel Prize-winner for the discovery of vitamins
- Arthur Harden, (1865–1940), British, awarded a Nobel prize for studies on the enzymes of fermentation
- Wayne L. Hubbell, (born 1943), American, biochemist-pioneer of site-directed spin labeling
- Max Henius, (1859–1935) Danish-American Biochemist who specialized in the fermentation processes.
I
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
J
- Zheng Ji (1900–2010)
K
- Herman Kalckar, (1908–1991), Danish, early work on cellular respiration, nucleotide metabolism and galactose metabolism.
- Sir Bernard Katz (1911–2003), German-born, 1970 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for work on nerve biochemistry and the pineal gland.
- Stuart Alan Kauffman, (born 1939), Professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics
- John Kendrew, (1917–1997), British. Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1962 for determining the first crystal structure of a protein, myoglobin.
- Sir Ernest Kennaway, (1881–1958), British. Early work on carcinogenic effects of hydrocarbons
- Arthur Kornberg, (1918–2007) American biochemist, won the Nobel Prize in 1959 for discovery of DNA polymerase.
- Sir Hans Kornberg, (born 1928), British. Microbial biochemistry
- Roger D. Kornberg, American biochemist, won the Nobel Prize in 2006 for studies on RNA polymerase.
- Thomas B. Kornberg, American biochemist
- Ernst T. Krebs, Jr. (1911–1996). Promoter of the ineffective cancer cures laetrile and pangamic acid
- Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, (1900–1981), German, 1953 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine see Krebs cycle
L
- Marc Lacroix (biochemist), (b. 1963), Belgian.
- Phoebus Levene, (1869–1940), Russian, discovered that DNA was composed of nucleobases and phosphate.
- Choh Hao Li (1913–1987) Known for discovering and synthesizing the human pituitary growth hormone.
M
- John James Rickard Macleod, (1876–1935), Scottish biochemist and physiologist, 1923 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, discovery of Insulin.
- Thaddeus Mann, (1908–1993), British reproductive biologist.
- Harden M. McConnell, (born 1927) American biochemist
- Maude Menten, (1879–1960) Canadian, early work on enzyme kinetics.
- Friedrich Miescher, (1844–1895) first scientist to isolate DNA
- Peter D. Mitchell, (1920–1992) British, 1978 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Leonor Michaelis, (1875–1949) German, early work on enzyme kinetics.
- César Milstein, (1927–2002), Argentine biochemist in the field of antibody research. Shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1984 with Niels K. Jerne and Georges Köhler.
- Jacques Monod, (1910–1976), French, 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Kary Mullis, (born 1944), American, 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry see Polymerase chain reaction
- Elmer Verner McCollum (1879–1967) co-discovered Vitamins A and D and their benefits
N
- David Nachmansohn, (1899–1983), German, responsible for elucidating the role of phosphocreatine in energy production in the muscles.
- Joseph Needham, (1900—1995), British, studied the history of Chinese science
- Carl Neuberg, (1877–1956), German, pioneer in the study of metabolism.
- Marshall Warren Nirenberg, (born 1927), American, winner of the 1968 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Paul Nurse, (born 1949), British, awarded a Nobel prize for studies on the control of the cell cycle
O
- Frank Olson, (1910–1953), American, non-consenting subject of CIA MKULTRA
- Olatunde Isaac (Nigerian Biochemist) who worked on the Effects of Dacryodes edulis seed flower on serum profile.
P
- Jakub Karol Parnas, (1884–1949), Polish – Soviet, major contributor to the discovery of glycolysis
- Linus Pauling, (1901–1994) American, 1954 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Louis Pasteur, (1822–1895), French, Pioneer in microbiology and stereochemistry
- Max Perutz, (1914–2002), British, Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1962 for solving the crystal structure of hemoglobin
- Samuel Victor Perry (1918–2009), British, pioneer in muscle research
- David Andrew Phoenix, (Born 1966), British, Structure-function relationships of amphiphilic peptides
Q
- Judah Hirsch Quastel, (1899–1987), British-Canadian, neurochemistry, soil metabolism, cell metabolism, and cancer.
R
- David Rittenberg, (1906–1970), US, pioneer in the use of radioactive tracers in molecules
- Jane S. Richardson, (1941– ), US, developer of the ribbon diagram
S
- Frederick Sanger (born 1918), two Nobel prizes for DNA sequencing and protein sequencing.
- Rudolph Schoenheimer (1898–1941), German/US, pioneer of radioactive tagging of molecules
- Raj Shankar, (1947–2000), Indian Neurobiochemist, Work on: Cerebral Metabolism, Signal transduction and for establishing that there is phosphorylation related folding problem of proteins in Alzheimer's disease.
- Anatoly Sharpenak, (1895–1969), Russian, biochemist.
- Alexander Shulgin, (Born 1925), Russian/American pharmacologist, popularized MDMA in America, and work with various psychoactive drugs
- Karl Slotta, (1895–1987), German/US, biochemist pioneer in study of progesterone and antivenom.
T
- Arne Tiselius, (1902–1971), Nobel laureate, developed protein electrophoresis.
V
- Angela Vincent, (born ?), British, Autoimmune and genetic disorders.
- Frederic Vester, (1925–2003), German, Author and ecologist.
- John Craig Venter, (born 1946), American, Human Genome Project.
W
- Selman Waksman, (1888–1973), Russian, biochemist.
- James D. Watson, (born 1928), American, discovered the double helical structure of DNA
- Maurice Wilkins, (1916–2004), British, discovered the double helical structure of DNA
- Friedrich Wöhler, (1810–1882), German, chemist.
X
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
Y
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
Z
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |