Ada Yonath is an Israeli scientist, who is known for her pioneering work on the structure and function of ribosome
@Israeli Women, Family and Life
Ada Yonath is an Israeli scientist, who is known for her pioneering work on the structure and function of ribosome
Ada Yonath born at
Not much is known about her personal life and marriage, except for the fact that she has been blessed with a daughter Hagit Yonath, who is a doctor at the Sheba Medical Center. She has a granddaughter Noa.
Ada Yonath was born to Hillel and Esther Lifshitz, Zionist Jews, in Geula quarter of Jerusalem, on June 22, 1939. Six years before her birth, her family shifted to Palestine from Poland.
Coming from a rabbinical family, her father was a rabbi but ran a grocery store in Jerusalem to meet the needs of his family. Due to financial constraints, the family lived in restrained circumstances. Young Yonath relied on books as the only source of knowledge and entertainment.
Despite deprived living conditions, the Yonath couple did not want to compromise on education and send their young daughter to an upscale and swanky school at the Beit HaKerem neighbourhood.
After the death of her father, she along with her mother shifted to Tel Aviv, where she enrolled at the Tichon Hadash High School. Since the tuition fee was quite high, she started teaching mathematics to younger students in order to pay the fees.
Completing her preliminary education, she returned to Jerusalem where she attained admission at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She gained her Bachelor Degree in Chemistry in 1962 and followed this up with a Master’s degree in Biochemistry in 1964. In 1968, she earned PhD in X-Ray crystallography from the Weizmann Institute of Science
Concluding her studies, she took up post-doctoral position at the Carnegie Mellon University in the year 1969 and followed this up with a position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1970.
It was while at MIT that she worked in the laboratory of Nobel laureate winner William N. Lipscomb, Jr. of Harvard University where she got inspired to pursue very large structures. She studied the structure of a globur protein staphylococcus nuclease.
In 1970, she moved back to her alma mater at Weizmann Institute where she established the first and only protein crystallography laboratory in Israel. Therein, she studied the process of protein biosynthesis, a major question concerning living cells.
Her main mission was to determine the three-dimensional structure of the ribosome, the cells' factory for translating the instructions written in the genetic code into proteins and revealing the mechanics guiding the process.
From 1979 to 1984, she worked in association with HG Wittmann of the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics in Berlin, who lent both financial and academic support to her.
She currently holds membership of various scientific institutions and academics including United States National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences; the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities; the European Academy of Sciences and Art and the European Molecular Biology Organization.
Along with George Feher, she received the Wolf Prize in Chemistry in 2006 for structural discoveries of the ribosomal machinery of peptide-bond formation and the light-driven primary processes in photosynthesis.
For her pioneering work in recognizing how bacteria become resistant to antibiotics, she was awarded with the L'Or�al-UNESCO Award for Women in Science in 2008. With this, she became the first Israeli woman recipient of the award. Same year, she was bestowed with Albert Einstein World Award of Science for her contribution in the field of ribosomal crystallography.
In 2009, along with Thomas Steitz and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, she was conferred with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. She became the first Israeli woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize.