Everything about Fritz Albert Lipmann totally explained
Fritz Albert Lipmann (
June 12 1899 –
July 24 1986) was a German-American
biochemist and a co-discoverer in 1945 of
coenzyme A. For this, together with other research on coenzyme A, he was awarded half the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1953.
Lipmann was born in
Königsberg,
Germany to a
Jewish family.
Lipmann studied medicine at the
University of Königsberg,
Berlin, and
Munich, graduating in Berlin in 1924. He returned to Königsberg to study chemistry under Professor
Hans Meerwein. In 1926 he joined
Otto Meyerhof at the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, Berlin, for his Ph.D. thesis. After that he followed Meyerhof to
Heidelberg to the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research.
From 1939 lived and worked in the
USA. From 1949 to
1957 he was professor of
biological chemistry at
Harvard Medical School. From 1957 onwards, he taught and conducted research at
Rockefeller University,
New York City. He was awarded the
National Medal of Science in 1966.
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