Denham Harman (February 14, 1916 - ), MD, PhD, FACP, FAAA biogerontologist is Professor emeritus at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Dr. Harmon is widely known as the "father of the free radical theory of aging". In 1995 he was nominated for the Nobel Prize in medicine.
Immediately after earning his Ph.D., in 1943, Dr. Harman joined the reaction kinetics department of Shell Oil in Emeryville, California. He worked for six years as a Shell research chemist, in part studying free radical reactions in petroleum products. During that period he was granted 35 patents, one for a compound used in plastic strips to catch flies ("Shell No Pest Strip").
Dr. Harman became fascinated with the phenomenon of aging, its cause and possible cure. To assist him in understanding this problem he went to medical school at Stanford University. Harman became chair of cardiovascular research at the University of Nebraska College of Medicine in 1958.
Dr. Harman has been married to the same woman for most of his life, a journalism student who he met at a fraternity dance while at the University of California. They couple had four children. Dr. Harman maintained a healthy lifestyle throughout his life. He has never smoked and drinks alcohol in moderation. He ran two miles a day until he was 82. He quit because of a back injury, but he continued to take regular walks to help him maintain a weight of 140 pounds on his 5-foot-10 frame.
Dr. Harman attempted to detect free radicals in association with the enzyme catalase, but without success. He attempted to do lifespan studies with short-lived strains of mice subject to radiation and given the radiation protection compound 2-MEA (2-mercaptoethylamine), and was able to show extension of lifespan. He was able to show extension of lifespan with a number of antioxidants.
In 1961, Dr. Harman published a study showing that the degree of polyunsaturation in fats had a dramatic effect on cancer rates in mice. The most highly polyunsaturated dietary fats were found to be the most carcinogenic.
In 1968 Dr. Harman published a dietary antioxidant study showing that the food preservative BHT fed over a lifetime to mice produced a 45% increase in life span. Dr. Harman became concerned that although many of his studies showed an increase in average lifespan by antioxidants, none showed an increase in maximum lifespan.
After years of frustration over his inability to increase maximum lifespan with antioxidant supplements, Dr. Harman came to the conclusion that mitochondria were producing as well as being damaged by free radicals, but that exogenous antioxidants don't enter the mitochondria. And that it is mitochondria that determine lifespan. He published his ideas on what he called the "Mitochondrial Theory of Aging" in the April issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
1916 births | Academics | Biogerontologists | Founders by field | Life extensionists | Living people | Medical academics
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