Max Ferdinand Perutz was an Austrian-born British molecular biologist who was awarded the ‘Nobel Prize for Chemistry’ in 1962
@Molecular Biologists, Family and Childhood
Max Ferdinand Perutz was an Austrian-born British molecular biologist who was awarded the ‘Nobel Prize for Chemistry’ in 1962
Max Perutz born at
He married Gisela Clara Mathilde Peiser, a medical photographer, in 1942. She was a Protestant.
Their daughter, Vivien was born in 1944 while son, Robin, was born in 1949. He serves the ‘University of York’ as Professor of Organic Chemistry, where he was also the head of department. Robin became a ‘Fellow of the Royal Society’ in 2010.
During the later stage of his life Perutz became an atheist although respected others’ religious beliefs.
He was born on May 19, 1914, in Vienna, Austria, in a Jewish family to Hugo Perutz and his wife Adele "Dely" Goldschmidt. His father hailed from a family of textile manufacturers who introduced mechanical spinning and weaving to the monarchy of Austria.
Perutz was baptized in the Catholic religion. He studied at ‘Theresianum’ in Vienna, a public boarding school founded by Empress Maria Theresia. Though his parents wanted him to pursue law, being inspired by one of his school teachers he developed interest in chemistry.
After convincing his parents of his choice, he joined ‘University of Vienna’ to study chemistry and obtained his graduation degree in 1936.
Becoming aware of the developments being made by English biochemist Gowland Hopkins at the ‘University of Cambridge’, he requested Professor Hermann Marks, who was about to visit Cambridge, to see if Hopkins would be interested to induct him. However Professor Marks forgot the matter but helped him to join English scientist J.D. Bernal as a research student in the latter’s investigation of X-ray crystallography.
He was inducted in research group of Bernal at ‘Cavendish Laboratory’ in Cambridge and although initially he faced challenges with the new subject of crystallography, he picked it up quickly. He received financial support of ₤500 from his father.
As Adolf Hitler captured Austria in 1938, his parents fled to Switzerland and lost all their money which resulted in Perutz losing financial support. However his knowledge about crystals and skill of mountaineering and skiing helped him join a team of three men in the summer of 1938 to investigate transformation of snow into ice in the Swiss glaciers. His article for the ‘Proceedings of the Royal Society’ established his proficiency about glaciers.
British physicist and X-ray crystallographer Sir William Lawrence Bragg, who at that time served as head of Experimental Physics at Cavendish saw prospect in Perutz's investigation into hemoglobin and inspired Perutz to apply for a ‘Rockefeller Foundation’ grant to continue with his research. Upon receiving the grant on January 1, 1939, Perutz using the money brought his parents to England in March that year.
At the outbreak of the ‘Second World War’ Winston Churchill ordered people of Austrian and German background including Perutz to be sent to Newfoundland. He came back to Cambridge after several months of detainment.
He earned his PhD in 1940 from the ‘University of Cambridge’ under the guidance of Bragg.
His reputation as an expert on glaciers led him to be inducted in 1942 for the ‘Project Habakkuk’, a secret project of the British to build an aircraft carrier with pykrete – a mix of ice and wood pulp, to confront German U-boats in mid-Atlantic. He conducted his initial research on pykrete in a secret place underneath London’s ‘Smithfield Meat Market’.
In 1962 he was jointly awarded the ‘Nobel Prize for Chemistry’ along with English biochemist John Kendrew.