Daniel Nathans
– AutobiographyMy parents came to the United States in the early years
of this century as part of a wave of Russian Jewish immigrants seeking freedom
and opportunity in the New World. My mother, Sarah Levitan, came to America
when she was 18. My father, Samuel, rebelling against an orthodox family, left
home in his midteens and made his way to the United States a few years later.
They were married in Philadelphia in 1910. As the last of their nine children
I was born in 1928 in Wilmington, Delaware, on the eve of the great depression.
Soon after, my father lost his small business and was for some time unemployed.
Our house was cold and leaky, and (I learned later) my parents sometimes went
hungry. Yet they generally managed to retain their good humor and certainly
their hopes for their children. I have only fond memories of this period, no
doubt due to the special attentions of an affectionate family.
My education began in the public schools of Wilmington. During most of these
years, from about age 10, I also worked at some job or other after school, on
weekends, and in the summer months. Following in the footsteps of my brothers
and sisters, I went on to the University of Delaware, where I studied chemistry,
philosophy, and literature. Although I enjoyed science and mathematics, what
I remember most vividly is a small, stimulating circle of professors and students
(including a number of veterans just back from the war), interested in philosophy
and politics. To my father my interest in natural science meant "medicine",
and becoming a physician also seemed more attractive to me than any other alternative
I knew about. So I applied to medical school and received a scholarship at Washington
University in St. Louis. Washington University turned out to be a lucky choice.
The faculty was scholarly and dedicated and accessible to students. A wonderful
summer of research with Oliver Lowry, Professor of Pharmacology, convinced me
that a career in medical research and teaching suited me better than medical
practice. After getting an M. D. degree in 1954, I went to the Columbia-Presbyterian
Medical Center in New York for an internship in medicine with Robert Loeb, a
masterful clinician and medical scientist. That was one of the most valuable
years of my life. The glimpses of human strength and frailty that a physician
sees are with me still. I spent two more years at Columbia as a medical resident,
interrupted by service as a Clinical Associate at the National Institutes of
Health in Bethesda. During my years in Bethesda, I married Joanne Gomberg, and
our son Eli was born.
While at the National Institutes of Health I developed an interest in the biosynthesis
of proteins as a result of a study with Michael Potter and John Fahey of myeloma
protein formation in plasmacytoma cells. This led me to Fritz Lipmann's laboratory
at the Rockefeller Institute in 1959. Here I identified the bacterial "elongation
factors" involved in the addition of amino acids to growing peptide chains,
worked on the mechanism of action of puromycin as an inhibitor of this step
(with Amos Neidle), and in a collaborative study with Norton Zinder, demonstrated
that RNA from a bacterial virus directed the synthesis by cell extracts of viral
coat protein. During those years in the invigorating atmosphere of Lipmann's
laboratory and the Rockefeller Institute, I learned a geat deal, and Lipmann's
artistry made a lasting impression on me. I also found out that I liked biochemical
research and that I could do it. The intention of returning to a department
of medicine was abandoned, and I accepted a position at Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in the Department of Microbiology, headed by Barry Wood,
an inspiring former teacher at Washington University. During the years in New
York our son Jeremy was born, and soon after our move to Baltimore in 1962,
my wife gave birth to our youngest son, Ben.
In Baltimore I became head of a one-man "Division of Genetics" which gradually
developed substance with the recruitment of Hamilton Smith, Bernard Weiss, Kenneth
Berns, Thomas Kelly, and recently, John Morrow. My initial research at Hopkins
was a continuation of studies on the in vitro translation of bacteriophage RNA,
particularly its regulation by phage coat protein and the location of genes
by translation of fragments of the RNA. My co-workers during these years were
Yoshiro Shimura, Max Oeschger, Gerardo Suarez, Robb Moses, Kathleen Eggen, Roy
Schmickel, Herbert Kaizer, Marilyn Kozak, and Susan Polmar.
In the mid 60's I became interested in viral tumorigenesis and spent the first
half of 1969 learning about animal cells and viruses at the Weizmann Institute
of Science in Rehovot, Israel, with Leo Sachs and Ernest Winocour. That spring
a letter from Hamilton Smith telling me about the restriction endonuclease he
had discovered in pictures Daniel - with Autobiography free Nathans women naked animals of ex having - Daniel free site rape Nathans Autobiography - Nathans Daniel panties young Autobiography Daniel Nathans mom - Autobiography free son incest Hemophilus ex with Daniel having women Nathans - pictures animals Autobiography naked free of influenzae aroused my interest in the possibility
of using restriction enzymes to dissect the genomes of DNA tumor viruses. Back
in Baltimore in the summer and fall of 1969, Stuart Adler and I surveyed the
known restriction enzymes for their ability to cleave the DNA of Simian Virus
40, one of the simplest animal viruses that transform cultured cells to tumorigenicity.
Using fragments of Simian Virus 40 DNA produced by Smith's enzyme and by similar
enzymes discovered subsequently, Kathleen Danna and George Sack constructed
a cleavage map of the viral DNA. With this map in hand, other co-workers proceeded
to localize viral genes and template functions along the molecule, to construct
deletion mutants and later point mutants at pre-selected restriction sites,
and to analyse the genomes of naturally arising variants of the virus. Associates
in these later studies were Elena Nightingale, Ching-Juh Lai, Theresa Lee, William
Brockman, Mary Gutai, Walter Scott, Nicholas Muzyczka, and David Shortle; and
collaborators from other laboratories were George Khoury, Malcolm Martin, Kathleen
Rundell, and Peter Tegtmeyer.
As I look back on the last few decades of my life, I am struck by the good fortune
that came my way. Throughout my schooling there was an abundance of opportunity
and encouragement. Several of my teachers were remarkable individuals who had
a lasting influence on me. At every stage of my career I have had interesting
and cordial colleagues, some of whom are close friends. My field of research
is as exciting to me as ever, and it remains essentially a "cottage industry"
effort. I have had talented students who are a source of much enjoyment, and
I anticipate more to come as their careers develop. And most important, my wife
and sons have created in our home an atmosphere of joy and harmony, so essential
to everything else.
| Vita |
| Born 30 October, 1928, to Samuel and Sarah (Levitan) Nathans in Wilmington, Delaware, U. S.A. |
| Married 4 March, 1956, to Joanne Gomberg. Three children: Eli, Jeremy, Ben. |
| B. S. in Chemistry (1950), University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. |
| M. D. (1954), Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. |
| Intern (1954-1955) and Resident (1957-1959) in Medicine, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York. |
| Clinical Associate (1955-1957), National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. |
| Guest Investigator (1959-1962), Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York. |
| Faculty member (1962-present), The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. Since 1972, Boury Professor and Director of the Department of Microbiology. |
| American Cancer Society Scholar (1969), Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel. |
| National Academy of Sciences' U. S. Steel Foundation Award in Molecular Biology (1976). |
| Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1977). |
 
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.
 
Daniel Nathans died on November 16, 1999.