Gerhard Domagk
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Gerhard Johannes Paul Domagk (October 30, 1895 – April 24, 1964) was a German pathologist and bacteriologist and Nobel laureate.
Domagk was born in Lagow, Brandenburg, the son of a school headmaster. Until he was 14, he attended school in Sommerfeld, Manchester (now Lubsko, Poland). Domagk studied medicine at the University of Kiel, but volunteered to serve as a soldier in World War I, where he was wounded in December 1914, working the rest of the war as medic. After the war, he finished his studies, and worked at the University of Greifswald, where he researched infections caused by bacteria. In 1925, he followed his professor Walter Gross to the University of Münster (WWU) and became professor there himself. He also started working at the Bayer laboratories at Wuppertal. The same year, he married Gertrud Strübe. Later they would have three sons and a daughter.
He was appointed the director of Bayer's Institute of Pathology and Bacteriology, where he continued the studies of Josef Klarer and Fritz Mietzsch, based on works by Paul Ehrlich, to use dyes, at that time a major product of IG Farben, as antibiotics. He found the sulfonamide Prontosil to be effective against streptococcus, and treated his own daughter with it, saving her the amputation of an arm.
In 1939, Domagk received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for this discovery, the first drug effective against bacterial infections. He was forced by the Nazi regime to refuse the prize and arrested by the Gestapo for a week. [1][2][3] (This was because the Nazi-critical Carl von Ossietzky had won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1935, which had angered the German government and resulted in German nationals not being permitted by law to accept the Nobel Prize.[3]) Sulfonamides became a revolutionary weapon at the time, surpassing phage therapy, but were later replaced by penicillin, which showed both better effects and fewer side effects (sulfonamides can cause kidney stones and changes in bone marrow). Domagk's work on sulfonamides eventually led to the development of the antituberculosis drugs thiosemicarbazone and isoniazid, which helped to curb the epidemic of tuberculosis which swept Europe after World War II.
After the war, in 1947, Domagk was finally able to receive his Nobel Prize, but not the monetary portion of the prize due to the time that had elapsed.[3][4] He changed his focus to tuberculosis and chemotherapy against cancer. He continued to live and work in Wuppertal. Domagk died in Burgberg near Königsfeld, Schwarzwald.
[edit] References
- ^ Thomas Hager, The Demon Under the Microscope (2006) ISBN 1400082137 (cited in "The Saga of a Sulfa Drug Pioneer" - NPR Weekend Edition 23 December 2006)
- ^ NobelPrize.org
- ^ a b c Schück, Henrik; Ragnar Sohlman, Anders Österling, Göran Liljestrand, Arne Westgren, Manne Siegbahn, August Schou, Nils K. Ståhle (1950). "The Prize in Physiology and Medicine: The Nobel Prizes in Wartime", in Nobel Foundation: Nobel: The Man and His Prizes. Stockholm: Klara Civiltryckeri, 167-179.
- ^ Schück, Henrik; Ragnar Sohlman, Anders Österling, Göran Liljestrand, Arne Westgren, Manne Siegbahn, August Schou, Nils K. Ståhle (1950). "The Prize in Physiology and Medicine: The Nobel Prizes in Wartime", in Nobel Foundation: Nobel: The Man and His Prizes. Stockholm: Klara Civiltryckeri, 167-179.
[edit] External links
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