Arthur
Kornberg was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1918 and educated in its public
schools. He received his undergraduate degree in science from the City College
of New York in 1937 and the M.D.
degree from the University of Rochester in
1941. After a year’s internship in internal medicine, he served as a commissioned
officer in the U.S. Public Health Service. He was first assigned to the Navy
as a ship's doctor, and then as a research scientist at the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, from 1942 to 1953. He obtained training
in enzymology with Professor Severo Ochoa at New York University School of Medicine
in 1946 and with Professor Carl Cori at Washington University School of Medicine
in 1947. Upon returning to Bethesda, he organized and directed the Enzyme Section.
He resigned in 1953 with the rank of Medical Director, to assume the chairmanship
of the Department of Microbiology of Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis, Missouri. In 1959, he organized the Department of Biochemistry
of the Stanford University School of Medicine, serving as its chairman until
1969 and thereafter as professor. He accepted the title of Professor Emeritus
in 1988 and has been on active status to the present. The members of the Stanford
Biochemistry Department - Robert Baldwin, Paul Berg, David Hogness, Dale Kaiser,
Arthur Kornberg and Robert Lehman - stayed together as a cohesive unit for forty
years until retirement.From his early studies of the mechanisms of the enzymatic
synthesis of coenzymes and inorganic pyrophosphate, he extended his interest
to the biosynthesis of
the nucleic acids, particularly women Arthur Autobiography trial Kornberg fucking - animal free movies rough Kornberg Arthur stories sex - Autobiography lingerie uk Kornberg Autobiography Arthur - - incest Autobiography Kornberg Arthur hardcore DNA. After elucidating
key steps in the pathways of pyrimidine and purine nucleotide synthesis, including
the discovery of PRPP as an intermediate, he found the enzyme that assembles
the building blocks into DNA, named DNA polymerase. This ubiquitous class of
enzymes make genetically precise DNA and are essential in the replication, repair
and rearrangements of DNA. Many other enzymes of DNA metabolism were discovered
responsible for the start and elongation of DNA chains and chromosomes. These
enzymes were the basis of discovery of recombinant DNA which helped ignite the
biotechnology revolution.Since 1991, he switched his research focus from DNA
replication to inorganic polyphosphate (poly P), a polymer of phosphates that
likely participated in prebiotic evolution and is now found in every bacterial,
plant and animal cell. Neglected and long regarded a molecular fossil, he has
found a variety of significant functions for poly P that include responses to
stresses and stringencies and factors responsible for motility and virulence
in some of the major pathogens.Although the pursuit of research has been his
primary concern, other interests include the formal teaching of graduate, medical
and postdoctoral students, and the authorship of major monographs: DNA Synthesis
in 1974, DNA trial - women fucking movies free Kornberg animal Autobiography Arthur Replication in 1980, Supplement to DNA Replication
in 1982, and DNA Replication, Second Edition, in 1992. A scientific autobiography,
For the Love of Enzymes:
The Odyssey of a Biochemist, Harvard University
Press, appeared in 1989. The Golden Helix: Inside Biotech Ventures, University
Science Books, was released in July of 1995, and provides an insider’s
view of biotechnology.In his academic career, he has served as departmental
chairman, on the committees of the Medical School and university, as president
of the American Society of Biological Chemistry (1965), and on the advisory
boards and councils of numerous university, governmental and industrial research
institutes. He is a founder of the DNAX Research Institute of Molecular and
Cellular Biology (a Division of Schering-Plough, Inc.), and a member of its
Policy and Scientific Advisory Boards. He serves on the Scientific Advisory
Boards of Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Maxygen, and the XOMA Corp., and
is also a member of the Board of Directors of XOMA Corp.
Among his honors are memberships in the National Academy of Sciences, the Royal Society, American Philosophical Society, a number of honorary degrees, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1959), the National Medal of Science (1979), the Cosmos Club Award (1995) and other medals and awards.
He was married in 1943 to Sylvy Ruth Levy, who died in 1986. He has three sons and eight grandchildren. Roger is a Professor of Structural Biology at Stanford; Thomas is a Professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics at the University of California in San Francisco; Kenneth is an architect and founder of Kornberg Associates in Menlo Park and Delmar, California, specializing in laboratory design. In 1988 he married Charlene Walsh Levering, who died in September of 1995. In 1998 he married Carolyn Frey Dixon. Dr. Kornberg resides in Portola Valley, California. He enjoys tennis, travel, music, and time with his family.