Duilio Arigoni

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Duilio Arigoni (b. December 6, 1928) is a Swiss chemist and Emeritus Professor at ETH Zurich. He is a prominent member of the scientific elite which has elucidated the biosynthetic pathways of many organic natural substances.

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[edit] Birth and education

Duilio Arigoni was born on December 6, 1928, in Lugano, Switzerland. He completed his undergraduate studies in Chemistry from ETH Zürich in 1951. He completed his PhD in Chemistry from ETH Zurich in 1955. His PhD thesis was “Ueber konfigurative Beziehungen Steroid- und Terpenverbindungen”.

[edit] Academic Career

After completing his PhD, he became professor at ETH Zurich. He was also a visiting professor at Harvard University and Cambridge University. He has worked as a professor at ETH Zurich for over fifty years.

[edit] Research

Duilio Arigoni is known for his research in bio-organic stereochemistry. His major contributions are in the stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions and in the biosynthesis of terpenes, alkaloids, and enzyme cofactors. He has explored the detailed stereochemical pathways by which enzymes convert their substrates into products. His strategy of penetrating into the structure of enzyme-substrate interactions by concentrating on the detailed stereochemical fate of isotopic substrate labels, led him to make basic contributions to the mechanism of enzymic reactions requiring coenzyme B12, one of the 'pigments of life'.

[edit] Awards

Duilio Arigoni has received several awards in his life. In 1989 he was awarded the Wolf Prize in Chemistry along with Alan R. Battersby of the University of Cambridge "for their fundamental contributions to the elucidation of the mechanism of enzymic reactions and of the biosynthesis of natural products, in particular the pigments of life".[1]

He has also other awards. Some major awards he received are:

  • Award and Silver Medal, ETH Zürich (1955)
  • Werner-Award, Swiss Chemical Society (1960)
  • Ruzicka-Award, ETH Zürich (1961)
  • Piria-Medal, Italian Chemical Society (1962)
  • Guenther-Award, American Chemical Society (1970)
  • Cannizzaro-Award, Accademia dei Lincei, Roma (1971)
  • Flintoff Medal, Royal Society of Chemistry, London, UK (1981)
  • Davy Medal, the Royal Society, London, UK (1983)
  • Robert Robinson Medal, Royal Society of Chemistry, UK (1984)
  • R. A. Welch-Award, Robert A. Welch Foundation, Houston, Texas, USA (1985)
  • Arthur C. Cope Award, American Chemical Society, USA (1986)
  • Paul Karrer Medal, University of Zürich (1989)
  • Quilico-Medal, Italian Chemical Society (1992)
  • Marcel Benoist Prize, Switzerland (1992)

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[edit] External links