Sir Aaron Klug Biography
- Nobel Prize Winner (1982)
Sir Aaron Klug, OM, FRS (born 11 August 1926 in
Zelvas, Lithuania ) is a Lithuanian-born British physicist and chemist, and
winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his development of
crystallographic electron microscopy.
Having moved to South Africa at the age of two, he graduated with a degree in
science at the University of Witwatersrand and studied crystallography at the
University of Cape Town before moving to England, completing his doctorate at
Trinity College, Cambridge in 1953.
Working with Rosalind Franklin in John Bernal's lab in London aroused a lifelong
interest in the study of viruses, and during his time there in the late 1950s he
made discoveries in the structure of the tobacco mosaic virus. Over the
following decade Klug used methods from X-ray diffraction, microscopy and
structural modelling to develop crystallographic electron microscopy in which a
sequence of two-dimensional images of crystals taken from different angles are
combined to produce three-dimensional images of the target.
Between 1986 and 1996 he was director of the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in
Cambridge, and was knighted in 1988.
LIST OF NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS IN
CHEMISTRY PART II.
Grignard Victor
Grubbs Robert H
Haber Fritz
Hahn Otto
Harden Sir Arthur
Hassel Odd
Hauptman Herbert
Sir Walter Norman
Haworth
Heeger Alan
Hershko Avram
Herschbach
Dudley
Herzberg Gerhard
Heyrovsky
Jaroslav
Hinshelwood Sir
Cyril Norman
Hodgkin Dorothy
Crowfoot
Hoff Jacobus Henricus
Hoffmann Roald
Huber Robert
Joliot-Curie Irene
Joliot Frederic
Karle Jerome
Karrer Paul
Kendrew Sir John
Cowdery
Klug Sir Aaron
Knowles William
Kohn Walter
Kroto Sir Harold
Kuhn Richard
Langmuir Irving
Lee Yuan
Lehn Jean-Marie
Leloir Luis
Libby Willard Frank
Lipscomb William
MacDiarmid Alan G
MacKinnon
Roderick
Marcus Rudolph A
Martin Archer John
Porter
McMillan Edwin
Mattison
Merrifield
Robert Bruce
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