- Andrew Huxley
Infobox Scientist
name = Sir Andrew Huxley
image_size = 182px
caption = Andrew Huxley at Trinity College, Cambridge, July 2005
birth_name = Andrew Fielding Huxley
birth_date = birth date and age|1917|11|22
birth_place =Hampstead ,London ,England
death_date =
death_place =
residence =
citizenship =
nationality = British
ethnicity =
fields = physiologist and biophysicist
workplaces =
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =
academic_advisors =
doctoral_students =
notable_students =
known_for = nerveaction potential s
author_abbrev_bot =
author_abbrev_zoo =
influences =
influenced =
awards = 1963Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
religion =
footnotes =Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley, OM, FRS (born
22 November 1917 ,Hampstead ,London [GRO Register of Births: MAR 1918 1a 724 HAMPSTEAD - Andrew F. Huxley, mmn - Bruce] ) is an English physiologist and biophysicist, who won the 1963Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work withAlan Lloyd Hodgkin on the basis of nerveaction potential s, the electrical impulses that enable the activity of an organism to be coordinated by acentral nervous system . Hodgkin and Huxley shared the prize that year withJohn Carew Eccles , who was cited for research onsynapse s. Hodgkin and Huxley's findings led the pair to hypothesize the existence ofion channel s, which were isolated only decades later. Together with the Swiss physiologistRobert Stämpfli he evidenced the existence ofsaltatory conduction inmyelin ated nerve fibres.Huxley was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of London on17 March 1955 . He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II on12 November 1974 . Sir Andrew was then appointed to the Order of Merit on11 November 1983 .Family
Huxley is a youngest son of the
writer and editor Leonard Huxley by his second wife Rosalind Bruce, and hence half-brother of thewriter Aldous Huxley and fellowbiologist Julian Huxley and grandson of the biologist T. H. Huxley. In 1947 he married Jocelyn Richenda Gammell Pease (1925-2003), the daughter of the geneticistMichael Pease and his wife Helen Bowen Wedgwood, the daughter of Josiah Wedgwood. They had one son and five daughters:* Janet Rachel Huxley (born 20 April 1948)
* Stewart Leonard Huxley (born 19 December 1949)
* Camilla Rosalind Huxley (born 12 March 1952)
* Eleanor Bruce Huxley (born 21 February 1959)
* Henrietta Catherine Huxley (born 25 December 1960)
* Clare Marjory Pease Huxley (born 4 November 1962)Family tree
Nobel Prize
The experimental measurements on which the pair based their action potential theory represent one of the earliest applications of a technique of
electrophysiology known as thevoltage clamp . The second critical element of their research was the so-called giant axon of the Atlantic squid ("Loligo pealei"), which enabled them to record ionic currents as they would not have been able to do in almost any otherneuron , such cells being too small to study by the techniques of the time. The experiments took place at theUniversity of Cambridge beginning in 1935 withfrog sciatic nerve and continuing into the 1940s, after interruption byWorld War II . The pair published their theory in 1952. In the paper, they describe [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/biomodels/ModelMonth/September2006/BIOMD0000000020_MM.html one of the earliest computational models] in biochemistry, that is the basis of most of the models used in Neurobiology during the following four decades. He continued to hold college and university posts in Cambridge until 1960, when he became head of the Department of Physiology atUniversity College London . In 1969 he was appointed to aRoyal Society Research Professorship which he holds in the Department of Physiology atUniversity College London .He currently maintains his position as afellow atTrinity College, Cambridge , teaching inphysiology , natural sciences andmedicine .Sir Andrew is arguably one of the greatest mathematical biologists of the 20th Century. From his experimental work with Hodgkin, he developed a set of differential equations that provided a mathematical explanation for nerve impulses -- the "action potential". This work provided the foundation for the all of the current work on voltage-sensitive membrane channels, which are responsible for the functioning of animal nervous systems. Quite separately, he developed the mathematical equations for the operation of myosin "cross-bridges" that generate the sliding forces between actin and myosin filaments, which cause the contraction of skeletal muscles. These equations presented an entirely new paradigm for understanding
muscle contraction , which has been extended to provide our understanding of almost all of the movements produced by cells above the level of bacteria.ee also
*
Hodgkin-Huxley model References
* Huxley A.F. 1980. "Reflections on muscle." The Sherrington Lectures XIV. Liverpool.
* [http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/index.php?pageid=172 The Master of Trinity] at
Trinity College, Cambridge
* [http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1963/huxley-bio.html Biography of Andrew Huxley]Persondata
NAME = Huxley, Andrew
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Huxley, Andrew Fielding
SHORT DESCRIPTION = physiologist and biophysicist
DATE OF BIRTH =1917-11-22
PLACE OF BIRTH =Hampstead ,London ,England
DATE OF DEATH =
PLACE OF DEATH =
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.