Zeitpunkt Nutzer Delta Tröts TNR Titel Version maxTL So 19.05.2024 00:00:03 1.949.124 +735 91.479.073 46,9 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Sa 18.05.2024 00:00:03 1.948.389 +1.075 91.397.021 46,9 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Fr 17.05.2024 00:00:03 1.947.314 +1.219 91.284.417 46,9 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Do 16.05.2024 00:00:02 1.946.095 +1.151 91.199.612 46,9 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Mi 15.05.2024 00:00:02 1.944.944 +1.182 91.089.106 46,8 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Di 14.05.2024 00:00:02 1.943.762 +1.104 90.983.497 46,8 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Mo 13.05.2024 00:00:06 1.942.658 +885 90.885.517 46,8 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 So 12.05.2024 00:00:03 1.941.773 +981 90.811.593 46,8 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Sa 11.05.2024 00:00:03 1.940.792 +1.072 90.714.998 46,7 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500 Fr 10.05.2024 00:00:03 1.939.720 0 90.614.006 46,7 Mastodon 4.3.0... 500
Project Gutenberg (@gutenberg_org) · 05/2023 · Tröts: 3.086 · Folger: 24.802
So 19.05.2024 17:56
Austrian molecular biologist Max F. Perutz was born #OTD in 1914.
He is best known for his work on the structure of hemoglobin, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1962, sharing it with John Kendrew.
Using X-ray crystallography, Perutz was able to determine the three-dimensional structure of hemoglobin, which was a groundbreaking achievement in understanding how proteins function at the molecular level.
#science #molecularbiology #cristallography
1962 Press Photo Max Ferdinand Perutz co-winner Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Max Ferdinand Perutz was born in Vienna on May 19th, 1914. Both his parents, Hugo Perutz and Dely Goldschmidt, came from families of textile manufacturers who had made their fortune in the 19th century by the introduction of mechanical spinning and weaving into the Austrian monarchy. He was sent to school at the Theresianum, a grammar school derived from an officers academy of the days of the empress Maria Theresia, and his parents suggested that he should study law in preparation for entering the family business. However, a good schoolmaster awakened his interest in chemistry, and he had no difficulty in persuading his parents to let him study the subject of his choice. In 1932, he entered Vienna University, where he, in his own words, “wasted five semesters in an exacting course of inorganic analysis”. His curiosity was aroused, however, by organic chemistry, and especially by a course of organic biochemistry, given by F. von Wessely, in which Sir F.G. Hopkins’ work at Cambridge was mentioned. It was here that Perutz decided that Cambridge was the place where he wanted to work for his Ph.D. thesis. With financial help from his father he became a research student at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge under J.D. Bernal in September 1936, and he has stayed at Cambridge ever since.
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