Edward Calvin Kendall was an American chemist known for his work with hormones of the adrenal gland
@Chemists, Career and Childhood
Edward Calvin Kendall was an American chemist known for his work with hormones of the adrenal gland
Edward Calvin Kendall born at
Edward Calvin Kendall married Rebecca Kennedy in 1915, and they had four children.
He died on May 4, 1972, at the age of 86.
Edward Calvin Kendall was born on March 8, 1886, in South Norwalk, Connecticut, USA, to George Stanley Kendall and Eva Frances Abbott.
He went to the Columbia University for his higher studies upon the completion of his schooling. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in 1908 and a Master of Science degree in Chemistry the next year. In 1910, he completed his Ph.D. with a dissertation on the kinetics of pancreatic amylase.
He began his career as a chemist with the Parke, Davis, and Company in 1910 where he worked on thyroid extracts. He was assigned the task of isolating the hormone associated with the thyroid gland.
He moved to the new chemical pathology laboratory at St. Luke’ Hospital in New York City in 1911 where he continued his research. Bu,t he did not like the work environment there as he felt that his work on thyroid extracts was not being given much significance in the context of clinical medicine. Thus he left the laboratory in 1913.
His career received a boost in 1914 when he was appointed Head of the Biochemistry Section in the Graduate School of the Mayo Foundation, Rochester. The next year he was appointed Director of the Division of Biochemistry there and subsequently Professor of Physiological Chemistry. He remained with the foundation until his retirement in 1951.
His research on thyroid extracts yielded good results at the Mayo Foundation and led to the first isolation of crystalline thyroxine. In addition he also successfully crystallized and established the chemical nature of glutathione, a compound important to biological oxidation-reduction reactions.
Edward Calvin Kendall eventually became involved in research on the hormones of the adrenal gland in the 1930s. At that time, Dr. Philip Hench, also at the Mayo Foundation, was also involved in research on adrenal extracts. In a separate setting, chemist Reichstein of Switzerland too was working on the same subject.
Edward Calvin Kendall is known for the isolation of thyroxine, the active constituent of the thyroid hormone. He was also involved with a team that crystallized glutathione, a compound important to biological oxidation-reduction reactions.
In the 1930s, he researched on the hormones of the adrenal cortex, the extracts of which could be used to alleviate the symptoms of certain diseases. Working along with Hench he discovered that cortisone, one of the hormones of the adrenal cortex, had anti-inflammatory properties and could be used to relieve effects of rheumatoid arthritis.