Herbert (Freddie) Gutfreund (hereafter called Freddie) made fundamental contributions to molecular enzymology—a name he introduced into the UK Biochemical Society as its first subgroup and as a discipline within the field of biochemistry. Freddie was born in Austria but moved to the UK in 1938, aged 17, during the upheavals across Europe leading up to World War II. He initially worked as a farm hand before his motivation in science took him first to the University of Liverpool, then Imperial College London as a Research Assistant, and on to Cambridge University. His experiences in Cambridge and the friends he made there during the foundation of modern molecular biology in the 1950s remained a major influence throughout his later career. He ...
Scots College (Sydney) in 1924 he undertook an apprenticeship in Pharmacy, attending the University ...
Biomolecular Sciences: uniting Biology and Chemistry www.rug.nl/research/gbb The scientific discover...
On the 26th May 2009, Edmond Fischer, winner with Ed Krebs of the Nobel prize in physiology or medic...
Frederick Sanger, British biochemist, won two Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. The first, in 1958, was for...
Derek Williamson's scientific career spanned the "Golden Age" of research into metabolic regulation,...
Bill Elliott graduated in Biochemistry at Cambridge and gained his PhD with enzymologist Malcolm Dix...
Emil Fischer, considered as one of the greatest chemists of all times, carried out much of the funda...
A brief account of the developments in biochemistry at the Faculty of Science of the University of G...
The article is devoted to Max Rudolf Lemberg (1896–1975), known primarily as an author of pioneering...
Physiology has spawned many biological sciences, amongst them my own field of pharmacology. No man h...
Physiology has spawned many biological sciences, amongst them my own field of pharmacology. No man h...
Frank H. Westheimer integrated physical and organic chemistry to become an important contributor to ...
This paper aims to outline briefly the main stages of Frederick Sanger’s scientific activity – the o...
The discipline of 'Biochemistry' in Europe and the USA arose early last century largely out of that ...
Harvard University (Frank Westheimer). At Harvard and at Wisconsin he developed solvent polar-ity pa...
Scots College (Sydney) in 1924 he undertook an apprenticeship in Pharmacy, attending the University ...
Biomolecular Sciences: uniting Biology and Chemistry www.rug.nl/research/gbb The scientific discover...
On the 26th May 2009, Edmond Fischer, winner with Ed Krebs of the Nobel prize in physiology or medic...
Frederick Sanger, British biochemist, won two Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. The first, in 1958, was for...
Derek Williamson's scientific career spanned the "Golden Age" of research into metabolic regulation,...
Bill Elliott graduated in Biochemistry at Cambridge and gained his PhD with enzymologist Malcolm Dix...
Emil Fischer, considered as one of the greatest chemists of all times, carried out much of the funda...
A brief account of the developments in biochemistry at the Faculty of Science of the University of G...
The article is devoted to Max Rudolf Lemberg (1896–1975), known primarily as an author of pioneering...
Physiology has spawned many biological sciences, amongst them my own field of pharmacology. No man h...
Physiology has spawned many biological sciences, amongst them my own field of pharmacology. No man h...
Frank H. Westheimer integrated physical and organic chemistry to become an important contributor to ...
This paper aims to outline briefly the main stages of Frederick Sanger’s scientific activity – the o...
The discipline of 'Biochemistry' in Europe and the USA arose early last century largely out of that ...
Harvard University (Frank Westheimer). At Harvard and at Wisconsin he developed solvent polar-ity pa...
Scots College (Sydney) in 1924 he undertook an apprenticeship in Pharmacy, attending the University ...
Biomolecular Sciences: uniting Biology and Chemistry www.rug.nl/research/gbb The scientific discover...
On the 26th May 2009, Edmond Fischer, winner with Ed Krebs of the Nobel prize in physiology or medic...