Max Ferdinand Perutz, OM (May 19 1914 – February 6 2002) was an Austrian-British molecular biologist.
He was born in Vienna in 1914. In 1936 he became a research student at the Cavendish Laboratory in a crystallography group directed by J. Bernal, and remained in Cambridge subsequently.
During World War II, he was asked to find a way to improve the structural qualities of ice for Project Habakkuk (a secret project to build an aircraft carrier made of ice) and investigated the recently invented mixture of ice and woodpulp known as pykrete.
In 1953 Perutz showed that the diffracted xrays from protein crystals could be phased by comparing the patterns from crystals of the protein with and without heavy atoms attached. In 1959 he determined the molecular structure of the protein hemoglobin, which transports oxygen in the blood, using this method. In 1962 he received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry, with John Kendrew.
He established the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, England in 1962 and was chairman until 1979. He remained active in research to the end of his life. From the mid-1980s on he was a regular reviewer/essayist for The New York Review of Books on biomedical subjects.
His son Robin Perutz is a professor of chemistry at the University of York in England.
1914 births | 2002 deaths | Alumni of Peterhouse, Cambridge | Members of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences | Molecular biologists | Austrian biologists | British biologists | British Jews | Jewish scientists | Nobel Prize in Chemistry winners | Biophysicists
Max Ferdinand Perutz | Max F. Perutz | マックス・ペルーツ | Max Perutz | Max Ferdinand Perutz
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