Frederick Sanger
From Wikinfo
Frederick Sanger, OM, CH, CBE, FRS (born 13 August 1918) is an English biochemist and a two times Nobel laureate in Chemistry. He is the fourth person in the world who has been awarded two Nobel Prizes (first three are Marie Curie, Linus Pauling and John Bardeen). Furthermore he is the only man to receive more than 1.0 Science Nobel Prizes (due to the effects of sharing, he effectively obtained 1.25 Nobels).
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Education
Sanger was educated at Bryanston School and then did his Bachelor of Arts in Natural Sciences at St John's College, Cambridge. He originally intended to study medicine, but became interested in biochemistry as some of the leading biochemists in the world were at Cambridge at the time. He obtained his PhD in 1943.
Achievements
Sanger determined the complete amino acid sequence of insulin. In doing so, he proved that proteins have specific structures. He began by degrading insulin into short fragments by mixing the trypsin enzyme (which splits protein) with an insulin solution. He then applied a spot of the mixture to a sheet of filter paper. He passed a solvent through the filter paper in one direction, and passed an electric current through the paper in the opposite direction. Depending on their solubility and electric charge, the different fragments of insulin moved to different positions on the paper, creating a distinct pattern. Sanger called these patterns ?fingerprints?. Like human fingerprints, these patterns were characteristic for each protein, simple and reproducible. He reassembled the short fragments into longer sequences to deduce the complete structure of insulin. Sanger concluded that the protein insulin had a precise amino acid sequence. It was this achievement that earned him his first Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1958.
In 1975, he developed the chain termination method of DNA sequencing, also known as the Dideoxy termination method or the Sanger method. Two years later he used his technique to successfully sequence the genome of the Phage ?-X174; the first fully sequenced genome. He did this by hand, without any automation. This has been of key importance in such projects as the Human Genome Project and earned him his second Nobel Prize in 1980.
In 1992, the Wellcome Trust and the British Medical Research Council founded the Sanger Centre (now the Sanger Institute) near Cambridge, named after Frederick Sanger.
Titles and honours
Shorthand titles
- Frederick Sanger, Esq. (13 August 1918–1943)
- Dr Frederick Sanger (1943–18 March 1954)
- Dr Frederick Sanger, FRS (18 March 1954–1963)
- Dr Frederick Sanger, CBE, FRS (1963–1981)
- Dr Frederick Sanger, CH, CBE, FRS (1981–11 February 1986)
- Dr Frederick Sanger, OM, CH, CBE, FRS (11 February 1986—)
External links
- 1958 Nobel Prize
- 1980 Nobel Prize
- The Sanger Institute
- About Fred Sanger, biography from the Sanger Institute
- About the 1958 Nobel Prize
- About the 1980 Nobel Prize
- Face To Face Interview With Fred Sanger By The Vega Science Trust
- National Portrait Gallery
Template:Nobel Prize in Chemistry
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Frederick_Sanger" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Sanger, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

