Otto Warburg
– BiographyOtto
Heinrich Warburg was born on October 8 sex movie - Otto Biography Warburg horse Otto movie horse - sex Biography Warburg rape stories Warburg - Biography fiction Otto Otto upskirt celebrity - Biography Warburg sex - Biography girls incest family young Otto Warburg - Biography Otto Кабель Warburg ВВГ 2170 Biography - проставки ВАЗ на Otto Priora ВАЗ Warburg 2108 опора стойки , 1883,
in Freiburg, Baden. His father, the physicist Emil Warburg, was President of
the Physikalische Reichsanstalt, Wirklicher Geheimer Oberregierungsrat. Otto
studied chemistry under the great Emil Fischer, and gained the degree, Doctor
of Chemistry (Berlin), in 1906. He then studied under von Krehl and obtained
the degree, Doctor of Medicine (Heidelberg), in 1911. He served in the Prussian
Horse Guards during World War I. In 1918 he was appointed Professor at the Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute for Biology, Berlin-Dahlem. Since 1931 he is Director of the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Cell Physiology, there, a donation of the Rockefeller
Foundation to the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft, founded the previous year.
Warburg's early researches with Fischer were in the polypeptide field. At Heidelberg
he worked on the process of oxidation. His special interest in the investigation
of vital processes by physical and chemical methods led to attempts to relate
these processes to phenomena of the
inorganic world. His methods involved detailed
studies on the assimilation of carbon dioxide in plants, the metabolism of tumors,
and the chemical constituent of the oxygen transferring respiratory ferment.
Warburg was never a teacher, and he has always been grateful for his opportunities
to devote his whole time to scientific research. His later researches at the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute have led to the discovery that the flavins and the
nicotinamide were the active groups of the hydrogen-transferring enzymes. This,
together with the iron-oxygenase discovered earlier, has given a complete account
of the oxidations and reductions in the living world. For his discovery of the
nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme, the Nobel Prize has been
awarded to him in 1931. This discovery has opened up new ways in the fields
of cellular metabolism and cellular respiration. He has shown, among other things,
that cancerous cells can live
and develop, even in the absence of oxygen.
In addition to many publications of a minor nature, Warburg is the author of
Stoffwechsel der Tumoren (1926), Katalytische Wirkungen der lebendigen
Substanz (1928), Schwermetalle als Wirkungsgruppen von Fermenten (1946),
Wasserstoffübertragende Fermente (1948), Mechanism of Photosynthesis
(1951), Entstehung der Krebszellen (1955), and Weiterentwicklung
der zellphysiologischen Methoden (1962). In the last years he added to the
problems of his Institute: chemotherapeutics of cancer, and the mechanism of
X-ray's action. In photosynthesis he discovered with Dean Burk the I-quantum
reaction that splits the CO2, activated by the respiration.
Otto Warburg is a Foreign Member of the Royal Society, London (1934) and a member
of the Academies of Berlin, Halle,
Copenhagen, Rome, and India. He has gained
l'Ordre pour le Mérite, the Great Cross, and the Star and Shoulder Ribbon
of the Bundesrepublik. In 1965 he was made doctor honoris causa at Oxford University.
He is unmarried and has always been interested in equine sport as a pastime.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
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.
 
Otto Warburg died on August 1, 1970.