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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1980
Paul Berg, Walter Gilbert, Frederick Sanger
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1980
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Paul Berg
Walter Gilbert
Frederick Sanger
Autobiography
I was born on
13th August 1918 in the village of Rendcombe in Gloucestershire,
where my father, also Frederick Sanger, was a medical
practitioner. Influenced by him, and probably even more so by my
brother Theodore (a year older than me), I soon became interested
in biology and developed a respect for the importance of science
and the scientific method. At Bryanston School and St John's
College, Cambridge, I was probably above average but not an
outstanding scholar. Initially I had intended to study medicine,
but before going to University I had decided that I would be
better suited to a career in which I could concentrate my
activities and interests more on a single goal than appeared to
be possible in my father's profession. So I decided to study
science and, on arrival at Cambridge, became extremely excited
and interested in biochemistry when I first heard about it,
principally through Ernest Baldwin and also other members of the
relatively young and enthusiastic Biochemistry Department that
had been founded by F.G. Hopkins. It seemed
to me that here was a way to really understand living matter and
to develop a more scientific basis to many medical
problems.
After taking my B.A. degree in 1939 I remained at the University
for a further year to take an advanced course in Biochemistry,
and surprised myself and my teachers by obtaining a first class
examination result. I was a conscientious objector during the war
and was allowed to study for a Ph.D. degree, which I did in the
Biochemistry Department with A. Neuberger, on lysine metabolism
and a more practical problem concerning the nitrogen of potatoes.
It was Neuberger who first taught me how to do research, both
technically and as a way of life, and I owe much to him. In 1943
A.C. Chibnall succeeded F.G. Hopkins as Professor of Biochemistry
at Cambridge and I joined his research group working on proteins
and, in particular, insulin. This was an especially exciting time
in protein chemistry. New fractionation techniques had been
developed, particularly by A.J.P.
Martin and his colleagues, and there seemed to be a real
possibility of determining the exact chemical structure of these
fundamental components of living matter. I succeeded in
developing new methods for amino acid sequencing and used them to
deduce the complete sequence of insulin, for which I was awarded
the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in
1958. This award had an important and stimulating effect on
my subsequent career. I had remained in Cambridge concentrating
only on basic research and avoiding as far as possible teaching
or administrative responsibilities. This recognition of my work
gave me renewed confidence and enthusiasm to continue in this way
of life, which I enjoyed. It also enabled me to obtain better
research facilities and, even more important, to attract
excellent colleagues.
Until 1943 I received no stipend. I was able to support myself as
my mother was the daughter of a relatively wealthy cotton
manufacturer. From 1944 to 1951 I held a Beit Memorial Fellowship
for Medical Research, and since 1951 I have been on the staff of
the Medical Research Council. In 1962 I moved to their newly
built Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, together with
M.F. Perutz's unit from the
Cavendish Laboratory which included F.H.C. Crick, J.C. Kendrew, H.E. Huxley and A. Klug. In this
atmosphere I soon became interested in nucleic acids. Although at
the time it seemed to be a major change from proteins to nucleic
acids, the concern with the basic problem of "sequencing"
remained the same. And indeed this theme has been at the centre
of all my research since 1943, both because of its intrinsic
fascination and my conviction that a knowledge of sequences could
contribute much to our understanding of living matter. My work on
nucleic acids is summarised in my Nobel lecture. This work has
not been done single-handed and it owes much to the excellent
collaborators I have had. Most of these have been students and
postdoctoral fellows spending a few years in the laboratory and
bringing their experience and ideas with them, but I feel
particularly indebted to my more permanent colleagues, B.G.
Barrell, A.R. Coulson and G.G. Brownlee, who have contributed so
much to the methods we have developed.
I was married to Margaret Joan Howe in 1940. Although not a
scientist herself she has contributed more to my work than anyone
else by providing a peaceful and happy home. We have two sons,
Robin and Peter, born in 1943 and 1946, and a daughter, Sally
Joan, born in 1960. Apart from my work my main interests are
gardening and what can best be described as "messing about in
boats".
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1980, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1981
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1980
Addendum, May 2005
Following the work on insulin I developed further methods
for studying proteins and particularly the active centres of some enzymes.
Around 1960 I turned my attention to the nucleic acids, RNA and DNA. I developed
methods for determining small sequences in RNA. The work culminated in the
development of the "dideoxy" technique for DNA sequencing around
1975. This was a relatively rapid method and was used to determine the DNA
sequence of the bacteriophage fx 174 of 5375
nucleotides in 1977, of human mitochrondrial DNA (16,338 nucleotides) and of
bacteriophage l (48,500
nucleotides). The method has been improved and automated in other human genome
(3 billion nucleotides).
I retired in 1983.
Frederick Sanger received his first Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1958.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 2005
MLA style: "Frederick Sanger - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 19 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1980/sanger-autobio.html
