Hans Adolf Krebs – Biography
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs was born at Hildesheim,
Germany, on August 25th, 1900. He is the son of Georg Krebs, M.D.,
an ear, nose, and throat surgeon of that city, and his wife Alma,
née Davidson.
Krebs was educated at the Gymnasium
Andreanum at Hildesheim and between the years 1918 and 1923 he
studied medicine at the Universities of Göttingen, Freiburg-im-Breisgau, and Berlin. After one year
at the Third Medical Clinic of the University of Berlin he took, in
1925, his M.D. degree at the University of Hamburg and then spent one year
studying chemistry at Berlin. In 1926 he was appointed Assistant to
Professor Otto
Warburg at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biology at
Berlin-Dahlem, where he remained until 1930.
In I930, he
returned to hospital work, first at the Municipal Hospital at Altona
under Professor L. Lichtwitz and later at the Medical Clinic of the
University of Freiburg-im-Breisgau under Professor S. J.
Thannhauser.
In June 1933, the National Socialist Government
terminated his appointment and he went, at the invitation of Sir
Frederick Gowland Hopkins, to the School of Biochemistry,
Cambridge, where he held a Rockefeller Studentship until 1934, when
he was appointed Demonstrator of Biochemistry in the University of
Cambridge.
In 1935, he was appointed Lecturer in
Pharmacology at the University of Sheffield, and in 1938
Lecturer-in-Charge of the Department of Biochemistry then newly
founded there.
In 1945 this appointment was raised to that
of Professor, and of Director of a Medical Research Council's
research unit established in his Department. In 1954 he was
appointed Whitley Professor of Biochemistry in the University of Oxford
and the Medical Research Council's Unit for Research in Cell
Metabolism was transferred to Oxford.
Professor Krebs'
researches have been mainly concerned with various aspects of
intermediary metabolism. Among the subjects he has studied are the
synthesis of urea in the mammalian liver, the synthesis of uric acid
and purine bases in birds, the intermediary stages of the oxidation
of foodstuffs, the mechanism of the active transport of electrolytes
and the relations between cell respiration and the generation of
adenosine polyphosphates.
Among his many publications is the
remarkable survey of energy transformations in living matter,
published in 1957, in collaboration with H. L. Kornberg, which
discusses the complex chemical processes which provide living
organisms with high-energy phosphate by way of what is known as the
Krebs or citric acid cycle.
Krebs was elected a Fellow of
the Royal
Society of London in 1947. In 1954 the Royal Medal of the Royal
Society, and in 1958 the Gold Medal of the Netherlands Society for
Physics, Medical Science and Surgery were conferred upon him. He was
knighted in 1958. He holds honorary degrees of the Universities of
Chicago,
Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Paris, Glasgow, London,
Sheffield, Leicester, Berlin (Humboldt University), and Jerusalem.
He married Margaret Cicely Fieldhouse, of Wickersley,
Yorkshire, in 1938. They have two sons, Paul and John, and one
daughter, Helen.
From
Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962.
Dr Krebs died in 1981.
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