Frederick
Gowland Hopkins was born on June 20, 1861, at Eastbourne, England. His father,
a bookseller in Bishopsgate Street, London, was much interested in science,
but he died when Gowland was an infant. For the next ten years Gowland lived
with his mother at Eastbourne, showing as a child literary rather than scientific
tastes, although, when his mother gave him a microscope, he studied life on
the seashore. But he read much and wrote rhymes, and in later life speculated
as to whether he might not have become, if he had been encouraged to do so,
a classical scholar or a naturalist. Later in his life, however, his literary
ability added much to all his scientific papers and addresses.
In 1871 his mother went to live at Enfield, and Hopkins went to the city pron rape - Sir Frederick video fee Hopkins Электродвигатель Hopkins - АИР Frederick Sir опора стойки 2108 ВАЗ 2170 Frederick Hopkins на проставки Priora - ВАЗ Sir of
London School. He was a bright schoolboy in several subjects, and was given
a first-class in chemistry in 1874. Later, as a result of an examination at
the College of Preceptors he was given a prize for science, and, at the early
age of 17, when he finally left school, he published a paper in The Entomologist
on the bombardier beetle.
After working for six months as an insurance clerk, Hopkins was articled to
a consulting chemist, and subsequently, after taking a course in chemistry at
the Royal School of Mines, South Kensington, London, he went to University College,
London, where he took the Associateship Examination of the Institute of Chemistry,
and did so well that Sir Thomas Stevenson, Home Office Analyst and expert on
poisoning, engaged him as his assistant. He was then 22 years old, and he took
part in several important legal cases. He then decided to take his London B.Sc.
degree and graduated in the shortest possible time. In 1888, when he was 28,
he went as a medical student to Guy's Hospital, London, and was immediately
given the Sir William Gull Studentship there. He was awarded, during this period,
a Gold Medal for Chemistry, and Honours in Materia Medica.In 1894, when he was
32 years old, he graduated in medicine and taught for four years physiology
and toxicology at Guy's Hospital. For two years he was in charge of the Chemical
Department of the Clinical Research Association. In 1896 he published, with
H.W. Brook, work on the halogen derivatives of proteins, and in 1898, work with
S. N. Pinkus on the crystallization of blood albumins. In 1898, when attending
a meeting of the Physiological Society at Cambridge, he was invited by Sir Michael
Foster to move to Cambridge to develop there the chemical aspects of physiology.
Biochemistry was not, at that time, recognized as a separate branch of science
and Hopkins accepted the appointment. Given a lectureship at a salary of £200
a year, he added to his income by supervising undergraduates and giving tutorials,
doing also for a few years, after the death of Sir Thomas Stevenson, part-time
work for the Home Office. Later he was appointed Fellow and Tutor at Emmanuel
College, Cambridge.
In 1902 he was given a readership in biochemistry, and in 191O he sex - Sir clips free Hopkins Frederick zoo became a Fellow
Sir - Hopkins Frederick sex movie forced of Frederick erotic naughty Hopkins lingerie Sir - Trinity College, - Sir Frederick clips zoo Hopkins sex free and an Honorary Fellow of Emmanuel College. In 1914 he was
elected to the Chair of Biochemistry at Cambridge University. During all this
time he had to be content with, at first, one small room in the Department of
Physiology, and later with accommodation in the Balfour Laboratory; but in 1925
he was able to move his Department into the new Sir William Dunn Institute of
Biochemistry which had been built to accommodate it.
Among his outstanding contributions to science was his discovery of a method
for isolating tryptophan and for identifying its structure.
Subsequently he did the work which was to gain him in 1929, together with Christiaan
Eijkman, who had demonstrated the association between beriberi and the consumption
of decorticated rice, the Nobel Prize.
Later, Hopkins worked with Walter Fletcher on the metabolic changes occurring
in muscular contractions and rigor mortis. Hopkins supplied exact methods of
analysis, and devised a new colour reaction for lactic acid, and the pioneer
work then done laid the foundations for the work of the Nobel Laureates, A.V.
Hill and Otto Meyerhof, and also for that of many other later workers.
In 1921 he isolated a substance which he named glutathione, which is, he showed,
widely distributed in the cells of plants and animals that are rapidly multiplying.
Later he proved it to be the tripeptide of glutamic acid, glycine and cystein.
He also discovered xanthine oxidase, a specific enzyme widely distributed in
tissues and milk, which catalyzes the oxidation of the purine bases xanthine
and hypoxanthine to uric acid. Hopkins thus returned to the uric acids of his
earliest work, a method of determining uric acid in urine, which he first published
in 1891.
Hopkins was knighted in 1925 and received the Order of Merit in 1935.
He was awarded the Royal Medal of the Royal Society of London in 1918, and its
Copley Medal in 1926. From 1930 until 1935 he was President of the Royal Society,
and found little time for research. During this period, however, he exerted
great influence on his contemporaries.
In 1898 Hopkins married Jessie Anne Stevens. They had two daughters, one of
whom Jacquetta Hawkes, is married to J. B. Priestley, the author.
Hopkins died in 1947, at the age of 86.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.