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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1982
Aaron Klug
Autobiography
I was born in
1926 to Lazar and Bella (née Silin) Klug in Zelvas,
Lithuania, but remember nothing of the place, because I was
brought to South Africa as a child of two and grew up there. My
father was trained as a saddler, but in fact as a young man
worked in his father's business of rearing and selling cattle, so
he grew up in the countryside. He had a traditional Jewish
education and secular schooling, and though not a conventionally
well educated man, he had some gift for writing, and had a number
of articles published in the newspapers of the capital, for which
he acted as what would now be called a stringer. Shortly after I
was born he emigrated to Durban, where members of my mother's
family had settled at the turn of the century, and the rest of
the family followed soon thereafter.
Durban was then a relatively sleepy town in subtropical
surroundings. It was a fine place for a boy - there was the beach
and the bush and school was not too taxing. I went to a good
school, Durban High School, which was run on traditional English
lines, with a curriculum somewhat adapted to South African
circumstances. We had some good masters particularly in History
and English. However, by the standards of to-day, there were few
challenges other than Advanced Latin Prose Composition in the 6th
Form. The philosophy of the school was quite simple - the bright
boys specialised in Latin, the not so bright in science and the
rest managed with geography or the like. There was a good library
but it was the playing fields that kept one out of mischief. I
did not feel a particularly strong call to any one subject, but
read voraciously and widely and began to find science
interesting. It was the book called Microbe Hunters by
Paul de Kruif, well known in its time, which influenced me to
begin medicine at university as a way into microbiology.
At the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, I took the
pre-medical course and, in my second year, I took, among other
subjects, biochemistry, or physiological chemistry as it was then
called, which stood me in good stead in later years when I came
to face biological material. However, I felt the lack of a deeper
foundation, and moved to chemistry and this in turn led me to
physics and mathematics. So finally I took a science
degree.
I had by then decided that I wanted to do research in physics and
I went to the University of Cape Town which was then offering
scholarships which enabled one to do an M.Sc. degree, in return
for demonstrating in laboratory classes. The University lay in a
beautiful site on the slopes of Table Mountain, which one climbed
at week-ends. I was lucky to find as Professor there, R.W. James,
the X-ray crystallographer, who had brought to Cape Town the
traditions of the Bragg school at Manchester. He was an excellent
teacher and I used to attend his undergraduate lectures as well
as those in the M.Sc. course. From him I acquired a feeling for
optics, and a knowledge of Fourier theory, and I remember
particularly certain optical experiments on rather abstruse
phenomena such as external and internal conical refraction which
fascinated me. After taking my M.Sc. degree, I stayed on and
worked on the X-ray analysis of some small organic compounds, in
the course of which I developed a method of using molecular
structure factors for solving crystal structures, and taught
myself some quantum chemistry to calculate bond lengths and so
on. During this time, I developed a strong interest, broadly
speaking, in the structure of matter, and how it was organised. I
had now acquired a good knowledge of X-ray diffraction, not only
through my own work, but through having helped James check the
proofs of his fine book - The Optical Principles of the
Diffraction of X-rays - still a standard work. James wrote
beautifully and fully and took great pains to make everything
clear.
Supported by an 1851 Exhibition Scholarship and also by a
research studentship to Trinity College, I went to Cambridge in 1949.
Cambridge was the place for someone from the Colonies or the
Dominions to go on to, and it was to the Cavendish Laboratory
that one went to do physics. I wanted to work on some form of
"unorthodox" X-ray crystallography, for example protein
structure, but the MRC Unit where Perutz and Kendrew were working was
full, and Bragg, then the Cavendish Professor, had closed down a
project on order - disorder phenomena in alloys, which interested
me. I finally found myself a research student of D.R. Hartree,
who had been a colleague of both Bragg and James at Manchester.
He suggested to me a theoretical problem left over from his work
during the war on the cooling of steel through the
austenite-pearlite transition, and I learned a fair amount of
metallurgy in order to understand the physical basis of the
phenomenon. It turned out however in the end that it was not
special crystallographic insight that was called for - the course
of the transition was in practice governed by the diffusion of
the latent heat and I ended up using numerical methods to solve
the partial differential equations for heat flow in the presence
of a phase transition. I learned a good deal during this time,
particularly in computing and solid state physics, and the idea
of nucleation and growth in a phase change had its echo when I
came later to think about the assembly of tobacco mosaic
virus.
After taking my Ph.D., I spent a year in the Colloid Science
department in Cambridge, working with F.J.W. Roughton, who had
asked Hartree for someone to help him tackle the problem of
simultaneous diffusion and chemical reaction, such as occurs when
oxygen enters a red blood cell. The methods I had developed for
the problem in steel were applicable here, and I was glad to put
them to use on an interesting new problem. The quantitative data
came from experiments in which thin layers of blood were exposed
to oxygen or carbon monoxide. In the course of my stay there, I
also showed how one could analyse the experimental kinetic curves
for the reaction of haemoglobin with carbon dioxide or oxygen by
simulations in the computer, and so fit the rate constants.
This work made me more and more interested in biological matter,
and I decided that I really wanted to work on the X-ray analysis
of biological molecules. I obtained a Nuffield Fellowship to work
in J.D. Bernal's department in Birkbeck College in London and I moved there
at the end of 1953. I joined a project on the protein
ribonuclease, but shortly afterwards met Rosalind Franklin, who
had moved to Birkbeck earlier and had begun working on tobacco
mosaic virus. Her beautiful X-ray photographs fascinated me and I
was also able to interpret some pictures which had apparently
anomalous curved layer lines in terms of the splitting which
occurs when the helical parameters are non-rational. From then on
my fate was sealed. I took up the study of tobacco mosaic virus,
and in four short years, together with Kenneth Holmes and John
Finch, who had joined us as research students, we were able to
map out the general outline of the structure of tobacco mosaic
virus. This work was done partly in parallel with that of Donald
Caspar, then at Yale, but he spent 1955 - 56 in Cambridge, and I
formed an association with him which continued across the
Atlantic for many years. It was during this time that I met
Francis Crick
and we published a paper together on diffraction by helical
structures. I was fortunate to work with him again later, and so
be able to learn, as he once wrote of Bragg, from watching the
way he went about a problem.
Rosalind Franklin died in 1958 and, supported by an N.I.H. grant,
Finch, Holmes and I continued the work on viruses, now extended
to spherical viruses. We were joined soon after by Reuben
Leberman, a biochemist. In 1962 we moved to the newly built MRC
Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge which, under the
leadership of Perutz, was to house the original unit from the
Cavendish Laboratory (Perutz, Kendrew, Crick and, later,
Brenner), enlarged by Sanger's group from the Biochemistry
Department and Hugh Huxley from University College London. I was
thus privileged to join the laboratory at this stage in its
expansion and so be able to take advantage of, and to help build
up, its unique environment of intellectual and technological
sophistication. The rest of my scientific career is largely a
matter of record and much of this is dealt with in the lecture
that follows.
However, I should perhaps add that during the 20 years I have
been back in Cambridge, I have been actively involved in the
teaching of undergraduates, as well as of course supervising
research students. I am still a Director of Studies in Natural
Science at my College, Peterhouse, and under the tutorial or - as
it is called in Cambridge - supervision, system, I teach
undergraduates myself. I like teaching and the contact with young
minds keeps one on one's toes, but increasing responsibilities
have forced me to shed much of it in recent years.
Before I came to Cambridge I married Liebe Bobrow whom I had met
in Cape Town. She trained in modern dance at the Jooss-Leeder
School in London and later became a choreographer and coordinator
for the Cambridge Contemporary Dance Group. More recently she has
directed and acted in the theatre. We have two sons, Adam and
David, born in 1954 and 1963. Adam, after studying History and
Economics at Oxford and the London School of Economics, is now
doing research in Econometrics. David is a second year student of
Physics.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1982, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1983
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 1982
MLA style: "Aaron Klug - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1982/klug-autobio.html
