Ludwig
Karl Martin Leonhard Albrecht Kossel was
born in Rostock on September 16,
1853. He was the eldest son
of the merchant and Prussian consul Albrecht Kossel
and his wife Clara, née Jeppe. He attended the secondary school
in Rostock and went, in the autumn of 1872, to the newly founded University
of Strassburg in order to study medicine. He was especially influenced by the
lectures and practical teaching of de Bary, Waldeyer, Kundt, Baeyer and especially
by Hoppe-Seyler.
Part of his studies were carried out in the University of his hometown Rostock
where he passed in 1877 the state medical examination and in 1878 the degree
of Doctor of Medicine was conferred on him. In the autumn of 1877 he took an
assistantship in Hoppe-Seyler's Institute of Physical Chemistry in Strassburg
and in 1881 he qualified as
Lecturer of Physiological Chemistry and Hygiene.
In 1883 E. du Bois-Reymond called him to become Director of the Chemical Division
of the Institute of Physiology in Berlin in place of E. Baumann who had gone
to Freiburg and here, in 1887, he became Extraordinary Professor in the Medical
Faculty. In April 1895 he moved to Marburg in Hessen as Ordinary Professor of
Physiology and Director of the Institute of Physiology there. Here he worked
until the spring of 1901. Then he was called to the Chair in Heidelberg formerly
held by Kühne and before him by Helmholtz. In 1907 he was appointed «Geheimer
Hofrat» (Privy Councillor) and in this year also he presided as Chairman
over the Seventh International Congress of Physiology in Heidelberg. In 1908-1909
he was Prorector of this University.
Albrecht Kossel was an honorary doctor of the Universities of Cambridge, Dublin,
Ghent, Greifswald, St. Andrews and Edinburgh, and a member of various Academies,
among which are the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences and the Royal Society
of Sciences of Uppsala.
Kossel's field of work was physiological chemistry, especially the chemistry
of tissues and cells; his activities
as a teacher in the University, however,
extended to general physiology, which in his time was in most German universities
still not separated from physiological chemistry. He began his investigations
into the constitution of the cell nucleus at the end of the seventies, and in
the nineties he turned more and more to the study of the proteins, the alterations
in proteins during transformation into peptone, the effects of a phenetol diet
on the urine, the peptonic components of the cells, the simplest proteins, etc.
Working on fish-roe he studied the protamines and hexone bases. In 1896 he discovered
histidine, then worked out the classical method for the quantitaive separation
of the hexone bases. With his distinguished English pupil H. D. Dakin he investigated
arginase, the ferment which hydrolyses arginine into urea and ornithine, and
later he discovered agmatine in
herring roe and devised a method for preparing
it.
Kossel was active in securing the foundation of separate chairs of physiology
and medical chemistry in German universities so that these subjects would develop.
His works were published chiefly in the Zeitschrift animals Biography Kossel Albrecht photos sex - Biography Kossel Albrecht rape new bridal - Biography Kossel teen underwear Albrecht girls - Albrecht thumbnails Kossel incest jpegs - Biography family бетона - ТСЗПБ Albrecht Biography прогрева Трансформатор для Kossel Chevrolet Biography Lanos Kossel тюнинг Albrecht внешний Niva - für - Albrecht Biography photos animals sex Kossel physiologische
Chemie, which after the deaths of Hoppe-Seyler and E. Baumann came under
his direction.
Among his important publications may be mentioned: Untersuchungen über
die Nukleine und ihre Spaltungsprodubte (Investigations into the nucleins
and their cleavage products), 1881; Die
Gewebe des menschlichen Körpers
und ihre mikroskopische Untersuchung (The tissues in the human body and
their microscopic investigation), 1889-1891, in two volumes, with Behrens and
Schieerdecker; and the Leitfaden für medizinisch-chemische Kurse
(Textbook for medical-chemical courses), 1888, since reprinted several times.
He was also the author of Die
Probleme der Biochemie (The problems of
biochemistry), 1908; Die Beziehungen der Chemie zur Physiologie (The
relationships between chemistry and physiology), which was a contribution to
Kultur der Gegenwart, 1913.
Kossel had one daughter and one son, Walther (1888-1956), who became a prominent
Professor of Theoretical Physics at Kiel until he moved to the corresponding
position at the Danzig Institute of Technology (1932-1945), and in 1947 became
Professor at Tübingen University.
Albrecht Kossel died on July 5, 1927.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
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