Konrad
E. Bloch was born on 21st January 1912, in Neisse, Upper Silesia, then Germany,
the son of Fritz Bloch and his wife Hedwig, née Striemer. He attended
the elementary school and the Real gymnasium in the same city and in 1930 went
to Munich to study chemistry at the Technische Hochschule. He became soon attracted
to organic chemistry, especially the structure of natural products, an interest
which he owed in large measure to the inspired teaching of ans Fischer. Another
influential experience was to attend the Sessions of the Münchener Chemische
Gesellschaft and to hear the great organic chemists of the time, Adolph Windaus,
Heinrich Wieland and Rudolf Willstätter report their researches on steroids,
porphyrins and enzymes.
For racial reasons his studies in
Munich ended in 1934 after he had obtained
the degree of Diplom-Ingenieur in Chemistry. Leaving Germany Bloch was fortunate
to find a temporary position at the Schweizerische Forschungsinstitut in Davos,
Switzerland. His assignment there was to investigate the phospholipids of tubercle
bacilli, his first exposure to biochemical research.
In 1936 Bloch was able to immigrate to the United States as he had long hoped.
On advice by the late Max Bergmann and with the generous support of the Wallerstein
Foundation, he entered the Department of Biochemistry, College of Physicians
and Surgeons, Columbia University, where he became a graduate student under
Hans T. Clarke. Research leading to the Ph.D. degree was completed in 1938.
Rudolf Schoenheimer then asked Bloch to join his research group. The first few
years spent at Columbia with Schoenheimer and his associate David Rittenberg
were certainly the most influential of his «Lehrjahre». This period
more than any other developed his lasting interest in intermediary metabolism
and problems of biosynthesis. During that time (in 1942) Bloch in collaboration
with David Rittenberg initiated the work on the biological synthesis of cholesterol
which was to occupy his research interests for nearly twenty years.
In 1946 Bloch moved to the University of Chicago as Assistant Professor of Biochemistry.
Appointments to Associate Professor and Professor followed in 1948 and 1950,
respectively. At Chicago, in the
Biochemistry Department headed by E. A. Evans
Jr., the intellectual climate was stimulating and the conditions ideal for the
development of young investigators. Work on cholesterol, biosynthesis was continued
and progressed well with the aid of able and enthusiastic students. During the
years at Chicago Biography free farm - mov Bloch k9 bruno Konrad Bloch best Biography Bloch pictures rape Konrad - fantasy Bloch women - stockings Konrad in Biography Bloch rape - Konrad clips free Biography Konrad Biography - арматура Кабельна Bloch 2108 Konrad на проставки ВАЗ Biography 2170 опора ВАЗ Bloch - стойки Priora also free mov Konrad Biography bruno farm - Bloch k9 investigated (with J. Snoke) the enzymatic synthesis
of the tripeptide glutathione. As a Guggenheim fellow in 1953 he spent a highly
rewarding year at the Organisch-Chemisches Institut, Eidgenössische Technische
Hochschule in Zurich with L. Ruzicka, V. Prelog and their colleagues. The biogenetic
considerations on terpene-sterol relationships developed by the Swiss at that
time provided rich inspiration for the experimental work in his own laboratory
after his return to the United States.
In 1954 Bloch was appointed Higgins Professor of Biochemistry in the Department
of Chemistry, Harvard University, and in 1968 he became Chairman of the Department.
Apart from continuing research on various aspects of terpene and sterol biogenesis,
he has become interested in the enzymatic formation of unsaturated fatty acids
and more recently in various aspects of biochemical evolution.
Professor Bloch is a member of the American
Chemical Society, National Academy
of Sciences U. S., American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Society of
Biological Chemists, Harvey Society, American Philosophical Society, a honorary
member of the Lombardy Academy of Sciences, and a Senior Fellow of the Australian
Academy of Science. He was President of the American Society of Biological Chemists
(1967), Chairman of the Section of Biochemistry, National Academy of Sciences
(1966-1969), and Chairman of the National Committee for the International Union
of Biochemistry (1968).
Dr. Bloch has been honored as recipient of the following medals and awards:
Medal of the Société de Chimie Biologique (1958), Fritzsche Award
(American Chemical Society, 1964), Centennial Science Award (University of Notre
Dame, 1965), Cardano Medal (Lombardy Academy of Sciences, 1965), Distinguished
Service Award (University of Chicago School of Medicine, 1964), William Lloyd
Evans Award (Ohio State University, 1968). He holds honorary doctor degrees
from the universities of Uruguay (1966), Brazil (1966), Nancy (1966), Columbia
University (1967) ,Technische Hochschule, Munich (1968), and Brandeis University
(1970).
In 1941 Konrad Bloch married Lore Teutsch,
a native of Munich. They have two
children, Peter, and Susan.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
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. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
Konrad Bloch died on October 15, 2000.