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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. After
Hitler's invasion in
Austria and Czechoslovakia, the family business was expropriated, his
parents became refugees, and his own funds were soon exhausted. He was
saved by being appointed research assistant to Sir Lawrence Bragg, under
a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, on January 1st, 1939. The grant
continued, with various interruptions due to the war, until 1945, when Perutz was given an Imperial Chemical Industries Research Fellowship.
In October 1947, he was made head of the newly constituted Medical Research
Council Unit for Molecular Biology, with J. C. Kendrew representing its
entire staff.
He continued
holding this post until he was made Chairman of the Medical Research Council
Laboratory of Molecular Biology, in March 1962. His collaboration with
Sir Lawrence Bragg has continued through all these years. The scientific
work of Perutz on the structure of haemoglobin started as a result of
a conversation with F. Haurowitz in Prague, in September 1937. G. S. Adair
made him the first crystals of horse haemoglobin, and Bernal and I. Fankuchen
showed him how to take X-ray pictures and how to interpret them. Early
in 1938, Bernal, Fankuchen, and Perutz [Nature, 141 (1938) 523] published
a joint paper on X-ray diffraction from crystals of haemoglobin and chymotrypsin.
The chymotrypsin crystals were twinned and therefore difficult to work
with, and so Perutz continued with haemoglobin. D. Keilin, then Professor
of Biology and Parasitology at Cambridge, soon became interested in the
work and provided Perutz and his colleagues with the biochemical laboratory
facilities which they lacked at the Cavendish.
Thus from 1938
until the early fifties the protein chemistry was done at Keilin's Molteno
Institute and the X-ray work at the Cavendish, with Perutz busily bridging
the gap between biology and physics on his bicycle. The rest of the story
is well-known and forms the subject of his Nobel discourse. Perutz has
persued one sideline concerned with glaciers, studying their crystal texture
and mechanism of flow, but this was mainly an excuse for working in the
mountains: he is a keen mountaineer, his other recreations being walking,
skiing and gardening. Scientifically, his overwhelming interest lies on
the side of molecular biology. He is grateful for having had the good
fortune of being joined by colleagues of great ability, several of whom
have now been honoured with the Nobel Prize at the same time as Perutz
himself. Kendrew came in 1946, Crick in 1948, and Watson arrived as a
visitor in 1951.
Recently F.
Sanger, who received the Nobel Prize in 1958, also joined forces with
them. Perutz is extremely happy at the generous recognition given by the
Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Royal Karolinska Institute to their
great common adventures and hopes that it will spur them to new endeavours.
Perutz, who is a Fellow of the Royal Society, was made Companion of the
British Empire in 1962. He is also an honorary member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1942, Perutz married Gisela Peiser. They
have two children, Vivien (b. 1944) and Robin (b. 1949). From Nobel Lectures
, Chemistry 1942-1962. 1961 1963 The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1962 Presentation
Speech Max Ferdinand Perutz.
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