Bengt I
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Bengt I
Bengt I. Samuelsson born at
Samuelsson met his future wife, Karin Bergstein, while he was a student at University of Lund. Later they got married and the couple has one son, Bo, and two daughters, Elisabet and Astrid.
In August 2014, researchers from all around the world met for a three-day symposium held in Karolinska Institutet. In this symposium, they honored Professor Samuelsson as the founder of the research field Lipid Mediators.
On April 22, 2015, The Bengt Samuelsson Institute of Life Science was inaugurated in Jiangyin City of China. The institute focuses on the development of biomedical and pharmaceutical projects.
Bengt Ingemar Samuelsson was born on 21 May 1934, in Halmstad in southwest Sweden, to Anders Samuelsson and Kristina Nilsson Samuelsson. He was the only child of his parents.
Bengt had his early education at local public schools. Later, he entered University of Lund to study medicine. On earning his B.S. degree in biology, he decided to take up cholesterol metabolism and its reaction mechanisms for his graduate work. Instead, he was picked up by Sune Bergström, who at that time, was the professor of physiological chemistry at the University of Lund and was working on prostaglandins.
At the University of Lund, Bergström gathered a team of graduate students and started his his work on prostaglandins. Samuelsson was one of them. By 1957, using countercurrent fractionations and partition chromatography, their team isolated two prostaglandin compounds, E1 and F1.
A year later in 1958, Bergström joined Karolinska Institute in Stockholm as a professor of chemistry and moved his entire research team with him. Samuelsson also went with him.
At Karolinska, they continued with their research on prostaglandin. Concurrently with his graduate work in biochemistry, Samuelsson continued his medical studies. Finally, in 1960, he finished his dissertation and became docent in medical chemistry. Then in 1961, he received his MD degree from Karolinska Institute.
In 1961, Samuelsson was appointed as the Assistant Professor of Medical Chemistry at Karolinska Institute Concurrently, he also received one-year research fellowship at Department of Chemistry, Harvard University. He went to the United States in the same year and joined Harvard University as research fellow.
In 1962, on the completion of the fellowship period, Samuelsson returned to Karolinska Institute as Assistant Professor. Here, he rejoined Bergström’s team and resumed his work on prostaglandins. Later, he successfully determined the molecular structure of the compound and started working on synthesizing it.
In 1964, they established that prostaglandins are derived from an unsaturated fatty acid, called arachidonic acid. Later, Samuelsson developed a process by which arachidonic acid was first combined with oxygen to form endoperoxides, which was later converted into prostaglandins.
In 1967, Samuelsson left Karolinska Institute to join Royal Veterinary College at Stockholm as the Professor of Medical Chemistry. Here too, he continued his work on prostaglandins, establishing its importance on livestock breeding and other veterinary applications.
In 1973, he returned to Karolinska Institute as Professor of Medical and Physiological Chemistry. At the same time, he also became the Chairman of the Department of Chemistry. Also in 1973, he discovered thromboxane, which is known for its blood clotting properties.
Samuelsson’s work on prostaglandins remains his most significant contribution to physiology and medicine. He was not only the first to describe its molecular structure, but he also showed that the compound is derived from an arachidonic acid, found in certain vegetable oils and meats. Later, he showed how this acid combines with oxygen to form prostaglandins.