Jens C Skou

@Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, Birthday and Personal Life

Jens Christian Skou is a Danish scientist and doctor who won the 1997 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Oct 8, 1918

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: October 8, 1918
  • Nationality: Danish
  • Famous: Danish Men, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, Scientists, Chemists
  • Known as: Jens Christian Skou
  • Birth Place: Lemvig, Denmark
  • Gender: Male
  • Father: Magnus Martinus Skou

Jens C Skou born at

Lemvig, Denmark

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Birth Place

While training in Hjørring, Skou befriended a medical probationer, Ellen Margrethe Nielsen. The two shared a great rapport. When Neilson completed her graduation in nursing, she moved to Aarhus where the two married in 1948. The couple was blessed with a daughter in 1950, who died a year and a half later. In 1952 and 1954, they were blessed yet again with two more daughters.

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Personal Life

Jens Christian Skou was born on October 8, 1918, in Lemvig Denmark into a prosperous, wealthy family. His father, Magnus Martinus Skou, was a timber and coal merchant and his mother, Ane Margrethe Skou, was a homemaker. Young Skou was the oldest of the four children the couple had.

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Childhood & Early Life

Tragedy struck the Skous’ early in life when senior Skou died of pneumonia. Jens was only 12 then. However, the early loss did not disrupt the family’s economical and financial status, as his uncle took great care of the business along with his mother as a passive partner.

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Childhood & Early Life

When Jens Skou turned 15, he was enrolled at a boarding school in Haslev, Zealand, since there was no gymnasium or high school in Lemvig. While at the gymnasium, Skou found himself attracted to science and mathematics. In 1937, he appeared for the final examination.

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Childhood & Early Life

Having completed high school, Skou decided to take up medicine after much consideration. He entered the University of Copenhagen in 1937. After seven years of studying, Skou graduated with a medical degree in 1944.

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Childhood & Early Life

Having completed his graduation, Jens Skou did his internship in a hospital in Hjørring for two years. While the first six months were spent practicing in a medical ward, during the latter half, he served in the surgical section. Towards the end, he started conducting smaller operations. While serving in the surgical ward, Skou became interested in local anaesthetics and decided to use it as a subject for thesis.

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Career

He temporarily served at the Orthopaedic Hospital in Aarhus before terminating his clinical training in 1947 and taking up a position at the Institute for Medical Physiology at Aarhus University under Professor Soren L Orksov. It was while at the university that he worked to finish his doctoral thesis on the anaesthetic and toxic mechanism of action of local anaesthetics.

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Career

Apart from working at the Institute of Physiology and writing his doctoral thesis, Skou took up an extra job as a doctor on call one night a week in 1949. This fulfilled his wish of serving as a medical doctor. While serving as a doctor, Skou became a social democrat from a political conservative and realized the need and importance of free education and free medical care in the society.

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Career

In 1957, he published his thesis. Written up in six papers, his work on local anaesthetics made him aware of the identification of the sodium-potassium pump, which is responsible for the active transport of sodium and potassium across the cell membrane. From then on, his scientific interest shifted from the effect of local anaesthetics to active transport of cations.

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Career

Skou had discovered the fact that a substance’s anaesthetic action was related to its ability to dissolve in a layer of the lipid part of the plasma membrane. He was aware that the anaesthetic molecules affected the opening of sodium channels which he assumed to be protein. He believed that this affected the movement of sodium ions, making the nerve cells inexcitable, thus causing anaesthesia.

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Career

Skou’s most important contribution in the field of biochemistry came during the late 1950s. As a result of his experimentation and research, he proposed that an enzyme is responsible for the transport of molecules through a cell’s membrane. He discovered that the nerve cell membranes of crabs contain an enzyme, sodium potassium ATPase, which in the form of the sodium potassium pump helps to maintain the salt balance between the cells and the tissue fluid by pumping sodium ions out of the cells and potassium ions into the cells. This, in turn, helps in maintaining a high intracellular concentration of potassium and a low concentration of sodium relative to the surrounding external environment.

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Major Works