Dr. MartĂ­n Abadi
Frederick Sanger EMERITUS
Chair in the Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge
Rendcomb, United Kingdom
More Info
  • 1993
  • Fundamental and Mathematics Sciences (F.M.S.)
More Info
  • 1993
  • Fundamental and Mathematics Sciences (F.M.S.)
Election Remark
Frederick Sanger (13 August 1918 – 19 November 2013) was a British biochemist who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice.
 
He won the 1958 Chemistry Prize for determining the amino acid sequence of insulin and numerous other proteins, demonstrating in the process that each had a unique, definite structure; this was a foundational discovery for the central dogma of molecular biology.
 
At the newly constructed Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, he developed and subsequently refined the first-ever DNA sequencing technique, which vastly expanded the number of feasible experiments in molecular biology and remains in widespread use today. The breakthrough earned him the 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, which he shared with Walter Gilbert and Paul Berg.
 
He is one of only three people to have won multiple Nobel Prizes in the same category, and he was elected as Emeritus member of the Euorpean Academy of Engineering in 1993