Szent-Györgyi, Albert

Szent-Györgyi, Albert
born Sept. 16, 1893, Budapest, Hung., Austria-Hungary
died Oct. 22, 1986, Woods Hole, Mass., U.S.

Hungarian-born U.S. biochemist.

His discoveries about the roles played by certain organic compounds, especially vitamin C, in the oxidation (see oxidation-reduction) of nutrients by cells brought him a 1937 Nobel Prize. He found and isolated an organic reducing agent from plant juices and adrenal gland extracts and showed it was identical to vitamin C. His work on intermediates in the cell laid the foundation for the elucidation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle by Hans Adolf Krebs. In later years he worked on the biochemistry of muscular action (demonstrating the role of ATP) and of cell division.

Szent-Györgyi

Boyer
H. Roger-Viollet

* * *

▪ Hungarian biochemist
born Sept. 16, 1893, Budapest, Hung., Austria-Hungary
died Oct. 22, 1986, Woods Hole, Mass., U.S.
 Hungarian biochemist whose discoveries concerning the roles played by certain organic compounds, especially vitamin C, in the oxidation of nutrients by the cell brought him the 1937 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

      Szent-Györgyi earned a medical degree from the University of Budapest in 1917. He became interested in biochemistry and pursued studies in Germany and The Netherlands in that field. While working at the University of Cambridge (1927, 1929) and at the Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minn., U.S. (1928), Szent-Györgyi found and isolated an organic reducing agent, which he called hexuronic acid (now known as ascorbic acid), from plant juices and adrenal gland extracts. Four years later, as a professor at the University of Szeged, Hungary (1931–45), he helped prove that the acid is identical to the antiscurvy vitamin C, which had been discovered in 1907 by Axel Holst and Alfred Fröhlich.

      Szent-Györgyi then turned to the study of organic compounds known to play a part in the conversion of carbohydrate breakdown products to carbon dioxide, water, and other substances necessary for the production of usable energy by the cell. His work laid the foundations for Sir Hans Krebs's elucidation of the complete conversion cycle (the Krebs cycle (tricarboxylic acid cycle)) two years later.

      Devoting himself to a study of the biochemistry of muscular action, he discovered a protein in muscle that he named “actin,” (actin) demonstrated that it—in combination with the muscle protein myosin—is responsible for muscular contraction, and showed that the compound adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the immediate source of energy necessary for muscle contraction. Immigrating to the United States in 1947, he was immediately appointed director of the Institute for Muscle Research, Woods Hole, Mass., where he conducted research into the causes of cell division and, hence, cancer.

      Szent-Györgyi wrote The Crazy Ape (1970), a critical and pessimistic commentary on science and the prospects for human survival on Earth. Among his scientific publications are On Oxidation, Fermentation, Vitamins, Health, and Disease (1940), Chemical Physiology of Contractions in Body and Heart Muscle (1953), and Introduction to a Submolecular Biology (1960).

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Szent-Gyorgyi, Albert von — Químico y fisiólogo húngaro nacido en 1897. Fue el descubridor de la vitamina C y los efectos que producía su carencia. En 1937 recibió el premio Nobel de Medicina y Fisiología por su contribución al conocimiento de las combustiones biológicas de …   Diccionario médico

  • Szent-Györgyi, Albert von — Szent Györgyi , Albert von …   Scientists

  • Szent-Györgyi, Albert — (16 sep. 1893, Budapest, Hungría, Austria Hungría–22 oct. 1986, Woods Hole, Mass., EE.UU.). Bioquímico estadounidense nacido en Hungría. Sus descubrimientos acerca de los papeles que desempeñan ciertos compuestos orgánicos, especialmente la… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Szent-Györgyi,Albert — Szent Györ·gyi (sānt jôrʹjē, sĕnt dyœrʹdyĭ), Albert. 1893 1986. Hungarian born American biochemist. He was the first to isolate vitamin C and won the 1937 Nobel Prize for discoveries relating to biological combustion. * * * …   Universalium

  • Szent-Györgyi , Albert von — (1893–1986) Hungarian–American biochemist Szent Györgyi, who was born in the Hungarian capital Budapest, studied anatomy at the university there, obtaining his MD in 1917. He continued his studies in Hamburg, Groningen, and at Cambridge… …   Scientists

  • Albert Szent-Györgyi — en 1948 Nombre …   Wikipedia Español

  • Albert Szent-Györgyi — lors de son passage au National Institutes of Health entre 1948 et 1950 Naissance 16 septembre 1893 Budapest ( …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Albert Szent-Gyorgyi — Albert Szent Györgyi Albert Szent Györgyi. Albert Szent Györgyi de Nagyrápolt (16 septembre 1893 à Budapest – 22 octobre 1986 à Woods Hole dans le Massachusetts) est un scientifique …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Albert von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt — Albert Szent Györgyi Albert Szent Györgyi. Albert Szent Györgyi de Nagyrápolt (16 septembre 1893 à Budapest – 22 octobre 1986 à Woods Hole dans le Massachusetts) est un scientifique …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Szent-Györgyi — Albert Szent Györgyi Albert Szent Györgyi. Albert Szent Györgyi de Nagyrápolt (16 septembre 1893 à Budapest – 22 octobre 1986 à Woods Hole dans le Massachusetts) est un scientifique …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”