Gustav Embden

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Gustav Embden
File:GustavEmbden 2 (cropped).jpg
Portrait on a plaque in Frankfurt
Born 10 November 1874
Hamburg, Germany
Died 25 July 1933 (1933-07-26) (aged 58)
Nassau, Germany
Nationality German
Fields Physiological chemist
Known for Embden–Meyerhof pathway

Gustav Georg Embden (10 November 1874 – 25 July 1933) was a German physiological chemist.

Background

Gustav Embden was a son of the Hamburg lawyer and politician George Heinrich Embden. His grandmother Charlotte Heine was a well-known salonnière and a sister of the poet Heinrich Heine.

Education and career

Embden initially studied in Freiburg, Strasbourg, Munich, Berlin, and Zurich under the famous physiologists of his time, including Johannes von Kries, Franz Hofmeister, Gaule, Paul Ehrlich, and Julius Richard Ewald.[1] In 1904, he became the director of the chemistry laboratory of the medical clinic at the Frankfurt-Sachsenhausen municipal hospital.[1] His research here helped to build the clinic into the Physiological Institute by 1907 and into the University Institute for Vegetative Physiology in 1914.[1] In the same year, he retained his directorship[1] and started teaching at the University of Frankfurt am Main.[2] Embden served as the rector of the university from 1925 to 1926.[1]

Research

Embden conducted studies on carbohydrate metabolism and muscle contraction, and he was the first to discover and link together all the steps involved in the conversion of glycogen to lactic acid.[1][2] In 1918, Otto Fritz Meyerhof's work on cellular metabolism showed that the process involved the breakdown of glucose to lactic acid. Embden is known for having worked out the precise steps involved in this breakdown. Henceforth, this cellular metabolic sequence from glycogen to lactic acid became known as the Embden–Meyerhof pathway.[2]

Embden had also worked on developing a technique to prevent tissue damage. In doing so, he discovered the liver's role in metabolic processes, thereby laying a foundation for understanding normal sugar metabolism and of its pathological form, diabetes.[1][2]

Some scientific historians, such as Thomas Kuhn, consider the work done in the 1930s in the laboratories of Meyerhof, Parnas, Embden, Warburg, etc. to be the mark of a true scientific revolution.[3]

Awards

Although Embden was never awarded a Nobel prize, he was nominated 12 times over 8 years.[4]

Nobel Prize Academic Field Year Nominator(s)
Physiology or Medicine 1923 Karl Hürthle, Albrecht Julius Theodor Bethe, Ernst Schmitz
Physiology or Medicine 1924 Albrecht Kossel
Physiology or Medicine 1927 Albrecht Kossel
Physiology or Medicine 1929 L Seitz, Bernh. Fischer-Wasels, K Goldstein
Physiology or Medicine 1930 Ernst Schmitz
Physiology or Medicine 1932 A Dieudonné
Chemistry 1932 Hans von Euler-Chelpin
Physiology or Medicine 1933 E Cruickshank

References

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