Har Gobind Khorana

@Cambridge University, Family and Family

Har Gobind Khorana was an Indian-American biochemist renowned for his research on role of nucleotides in protein synthesis for which he won the Nobel Prize

Jan 9, 1922

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: January 9, 1922
  • Died on: November 9, 2011
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Cambridge University, Scientists, Biochemists
  • Spouses: Esther Elizabeth Sibler
  • Childrens: Dave Roy, Emily Anne, Julia Elizabeth
  • Universities:
    • Cambridge University

Har Gobind Khorana born at

Punjab, India

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Birth Place

He married Esther Elizabeth Sibler who was of Swiss origin in 1952. The couple had three children. Unfortunately one of their daughters died in 1979. They remained happily married till Esther’s death.

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Personal Life

He lived a long life and died of natural causes in 2011 at the age of 89.

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Personal Life

He was born as the youngest child to Hindu parents in a village in West Punjab. He had three elder brothers and one sister. His father worked as the village “patwari” or taxation officer.

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Childhood & Early Life

His family was poor but his father insisted on providing him a good education. Early on he went to a local school where he was educated under a tree by a village teacher; his father also taught him at home. His family was in fact the only literate one in the whole village.

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Childhood & Early Life

He went to the D.A.V High School in Multan where he was greatly influenced by his teacher, Ratan Lal. He earned a scholarship to study chemistry at the Punjab University, Lahore.

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Childhood & Early Life

He completed his B.Sc in 1943 and M.Sc in 1945. A brilliant student, he was awarded a scholarship by the Government of India to study at the University of Liverpool.

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Childhood & Early Life

He went to England where he worked for a Ph.D degree at the University of Liverpool under the supervision of Roger J.S. Beer. It was the first time he had traveled outside India and this experience was his introduction to Western culture. He earned his Ph.D in 1948.

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Childhood & Early Life

He received a job offer from Dr. Gordon M Shrum of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, in 1952. He accepted even though the British Columbia Research Council did not offer many facilities for research.

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Career

Dr. Shrum was a very inspiring man and Khorana could engage in whatever research he wanted to conduct under him. Along with a group of other researchers, he began to work in the field of phosphate esters and nucleic acids.

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Career

In 1960, he accepted a position at the Institute for Enzyme Research at the University of Wisconsin.

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Career

During the 1960s he delved deeper into his experiments in nucleic acids found in RNA, a chemical that translates the genetic information contained in DNA. RNA is composed of four chemical bases represented by the letters A, C, U, and G.

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Career

Using chemical synthesis to combine the chemical bases, Khorana deduced that the code for serine was UCU and for leucine it was CUC. He showed that the genetic code consisted of 64 distinct three-letter words.

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Career

Har Gobind Khorana was a world renowned biochemist famous for his work in the field of genetics and DNA. He was the first person to demonstrate the role of nucleotides in protein synthesis.

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Major Works