Kazimierz Funk (February 23, 1884 - January 19, 1967), commonly anglicized as Casimir Funk, was a Polish biochemist, generally credited with the first formulation of the concept of Vitamins in 1912, which he called vital amines or vitamines.
After the outbreak of World War II he finally moved permanently to America in 1939. In 1940 he started the Funk Foundation for Medical Research in America.
He died in New York in 1967 at the age of 83.
He later postulated the existence of other essential nutrients, which became known as B1, B2, C, and D. In 1936 he determined the molecular structure of thiamin, though he was not the first to isolate it. He was the first to isolate nicotinic acid (also called niacin or vitamin B3).
Funk also conducted research into hormones, diabetes, ulcers, and the biochemistry of cancer.
1884 births | 1967 deaths | Naturalized citizens of the United States | Polish biochemists
Casimir Funk | Casimir Funk | Kazimierz Funk | カシミール・フンク | Kazimierz Funk | Casimir Funk | 卡西米尔·冯克
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