- Erwin Chargaff
Erwin Chargaff (Czernowitz,
August 11 ,1905 –New York City ,USA ,June 20 ,2002 ) was anAustria nJewish biochemist who emigrated to the United States during the Nazi era. Through careful experimentation, Chargaff discovered two rules that helped lead to the discovery of thedouble helix structure ofDNA .Chargaff had one son, Thomas, with his wife Vera Broido, whom he married in 1928. Chargaff became an American
citizen in 1940.Early life
Chargaff was born in Czernowitz on August 11, 1905, Bukowina,
Austria , which is now Chernovtsy ,Ukraine .cite web | title = Faculty Remembered | author = Christy, Nicholas | date = Winter 2004 | url = http://www.cumc.columbia.edu/news/journal/journal-o/winter-2004/faculty.html | publisher = 'Columbia University P&S Journal" | accessdate = 2007-08-04 ] Chargaff had a difficult time deciding whether he would pursue science orphilology as a career: he had a natural gift for languages, and over the course of his life he would learn 15. His American colleagues recalled that he could speak English better than they could.From 1923 to 1928, Chargaff studied
chemistry inVienna , receiving a doctorate. From 1928 to 1930, Chargaff served as theMilton Campbell Research Fellow inorganic chemistry atYale University , but he did not likeNew Haven, Connecticut . Chargaff returned toEurope , where he lived from 1930 to 1934, serving first as the assistant in charge ofchemistry for the department ofbacteriology andpublic health at theUniversity of Berlin (1930-1933), and then as a research associate at thePasteur Institute inParis (1933-1934).He had published 30 papers by the time he reached 30 years of age.
Columbia University
Chargaff emigrated to
New York in 1935, taking a position as a research associate in the department of biochemistry atColumbia University , where he spent most of his professional career. Chargaff became anassistant professor in 1938 and aprofessor in 1952. After serving as department chair from 1970 to 1974, Chargaff retired to professoremeritus . After his retirement to professor emeritus, Chargaff moved his lab toRoosevelt Hospital , where he continued to work until 1992. He retired in 1992.During his time at Columbia, Chargaff published numerous
scientific paper s, dealing primarily with the study ofnucleic acids such asDNA using chromatographic techniques. He became interested inDNA in 1944 afterOswald Avery identified the molecule as the basis ofheredity . In 1950, he discovered that the amounts ofadenine andthymine in DNA were roughly the same, as were the amounts ofcytosine andguanine . This later became known as the first ofChargaff's rules .Honors awarded to him include the
Pasteur Medal (1949) and theNational Medal of Science (1974).Chargaff's rules
Erwin Chargaff proposed two main rules in his lifetime which were appropriately named
Chargaff's rules . The first and best known achievement was to show that in naturalDNA the number ofguanine units equals the number ofcytosine units and the number ofadenine units equals the number ofthymine units. In human DNA, for example, the four bases are present in these percentages: A=30.9% and T=29.4%; G=19.9% and C=19.8%. This strongly hinted towards thebase pair makeup of the DNA, although Chargaff was not able to make this connection himself. For this research, Chargaff is credited with disproving thetetranucleotide hypothesis (Phoebus Levene 's widely accepted hypothesis that DNA was composed of a large number of repeats of GACT). Most workers had previously assumed that deviations from equimolar base ratios (G = A = C = T) were due to experimental error, but Chargaff documented that the variation was real, with [C + G] typically being slightly less abundant. He was able to do this with the newly developedpaper chromatography and ultraviolet spectrophotometer. Chargaff metFrancis Crick andJames D. Watson atCambridge in 1952, and, despite not getting on well with them personally, explained his findings to them. Chargaff's research would later help Watson and Crick to deduce the double helical structure of DNA.The second of Chargaff's rules is that the composition of DNA varies from one species to another, in particular in the relative amounts of A, G, T, and C bases. Such evidence of molecular diversity, which had been presumed absent from DNA, made DNA a more credible candidate for the
genetic material thanprotein .Besides making these important steps toward the structure of DNA, Chargaff's lab also conducted research on the
metabolism ofamino acids andinositol , bloodcoagulation ,lipid s andlipoprotein s, and thebiosynthesis ofphosphotransferase s.Later life
Beginning in the 1950s, Chargaff became increasingly outspoken about the failings of the field of
molecular biology , claiming that molecular biology was "running riot and doing things that can never be justified." He recognized that human knowledge will always be limited in relation to thecomplexity of the natural world. It is simply dangerous when humans believe that the world is a machine and even assume that humans can have fullknowledge of its workings. In a world that functions as a complex system of interdependency and interconnectedness,genetic engineering of life will inevitably have unforeseen consequences. It is for this reason that Chargaff warned that “the technology of genetic engineering poses a greater threat to the world than the advent of nuclear technology. An irreversible attack on thebiosphere is something so unheard - of, so unthinkable to previous generations, that I only wish that mine had not beenguilty of it.”After
Francis Crick ,James Watson andMaurice Wilkins received the 1962Nobel Prize for their work on discovering the double helix of DNA, Chargaff withdrew from his lab and wrote to scientists over the world about his exclusion.cite news | title = No Nobel Prize for Whining | author = Judson, Horace | date =2003-10-20 | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9C02E4DE123EF933A15753C1A9659C8B63 | publisher = "New York Times" | accessdate = 2007-08-03 ] Chargaff was a notable exclusion, along with the deceasedRosalind Franklin , from the 1962 Nobel Prize for DNA discovery. The Prize can only be split three ways. Along with Chargaff, 23 other scientists contributed significantly to the double helix elucidation and were not rewarded with the Nobel for their work towards the double helix. Thus, only the people at 'the top of the pyramid' are rewarded for their genius, but all those who provided supporting material are well recognised by their peers, if not the public and the media.Books authored
Chargaff wrote 450 papers and 15 books on diverse topics during his retirement years.
*Erwin Chargaff, "Heraclitean Fire: Sketches from a Life Before Nature" (1978). Rockefeller University Press: ISBN 0-87470-029-9; 252 p.
*Serious Questions, An ABC of Sceptical Reflections. Boston, Basel, Stuttgart: Birkhäuser, 1986
ee also
*
Nobel Prize controversies References
* [http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/c/chargaff.htm Erwin Chargaff Papers] , American Philosophical Society
* [http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/medicalscience/story/0%2C9837%2C747814%2C00.html Chargaff obituary] from "The Guardian ",July 2 ,2002
*
* [http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/192/1/223.pdf The composition of the deoxyribonucleic acid of salmon sperm] by E. Chargaff, R. Lipshitz, C. Green and M. E. Hodes in "Journal of Biological Chemistry" (1951) volume 192 pages 223-230.
*External links
* [http://crystal.biochem.queensu.ca/forsdyke/bioinfo1.htm "How Genetics Got a Chemical Education"] . "Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences" (1979), 325, 345-360.
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