Bert L. Vallee

Bert L. Vallee M.D. was an Edgar M. Bronfman Distinguished Senior Professor at the Harvard Medical School. He was the founder and president of the Endowment and the CBBSM (Center for Biochemical & Biophysical Sciences & Medicine).

Life

Dr. Bert Lester Vallee (June 1, 1919 – May 7, 2010), received his M.D degree from New York University in 1943 and subsequently held positions at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard Medical School in Medicine and Biochemistry. Dr. Vallee has been a member of the Medical and Science Faculty of Harvard University since 1948. He was the Founding Director of the Biophysics Research Laboratory at Harvard (predecessor to the CBBSM), which was established in 1954 by The Rockefeller Foundation. From 1964 to 1989, Dr. Vallee held the Paul C. Cabot Professorship of Biochemistry, and since 1980 he has held the Edgar M. Bronfman Distinguished Senior Professorship at Harvard.

His primary research has been in zinc enzymology,[1] a field he is credited with establishing and for which he received the Raulin Award. His work on alcohol dehydrogenase, a zinc enzyme, led to his interest in the study of the molecular basis of alcohol use and abuse. Dr. Vallee is an expert on emission spectroscopy and the author of more than 600 scientific publications including books. He is an Honorary Professor of Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, the Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China, and the Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa. He is a Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA and the Royal Danish Academy, and holds Honorary Degrees from the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, the University Degli Studi Di Napoli Federico II, Naples, and the Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich. He was awarded the Order of Andres Bello, First Class of the Republic of Venezuela, and the Gibbs, Linderstrom-Lang, and Rose Medals.

The Bert L. & N. Kuggie Vallee Foundation

The Bert L. and N. Kuggie Vallee Foundation, a private operated organization, was established in 1996 by Bert L and N. Kuggie Vallee.

The main objective of the Foundation is to generate opportunities for unique intellectual endeavors. The purpose for which the [Vallee Foundation] is formed is to contribute to the advancement of medical education and medical science by:

Primarily, the Foundation's efforts have been devoted to programs for visiting professors and fellows. The one month visits, typical of the Foundation, have been a great success in providing adequate time to plan research, conduct experiments, and establish meaningful academic relationships.

To date, twenty-five Vallee Visiting Professors ("VVPs") have been elected and served at Harvard, Oxford, the Karolinska Institute, and the Pasteur Institute in Paris. The Vallee Foundation aims for continued success in identifying unique individuals while expanding the network of innovative enterprises. The opportunity to explore new avenues of intellectual pursuit is, ultimately, presented to identify more effective methods of joint research.

References

  1. "Edmond H. Fischer. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1992". The Nobel Foundation. In collaboration with Bert Vallee, we were able to demonstrate that these enzymes were in reality calcium-containing metalloproteins.

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