Giulio Cantoni

Giulio Leonardo Cantoni (29 September 1915 – 25 July 2005) was the director of the United States' National Institutes of Health's Laboratory of Cellular Pharmacology, later renamed the Laboratory of General and Comparative Biochemistry.

Early life

Cantoni grew up in Italy and got a medical degree from the University of Milan in 1938. Shortly after the fascists abolished the parliament, and introduced anti-Semitic laws, Cantoni, who was Jewish, fled with his family first to England. As Cantoni was boarding a ship heading for the America, World War II broke out, and as an Italian citizen he was interned in England and later in Canada. Eventually he was released and allowed to go to the United States in July 1941.

Author

After the war, Cantoni wrote a book about his journey in world war 2 called "From Milano to New York By Way of Hell: Fascism and the Odyssey of a Young Italian Jew".

Scientific career

Cantoni got a job at University of Michigan's medical school, where he worked until he became an assistant professor of pharmacology at Long Island College of Medicine in 1945. In 1948 he moved to the American Cancer Society, and after two years he moved again to Western Reserve University. In 1954 he started the National Institutes of Health's Laboratory of Cellular Pharmacology at the National Institute of Mental Health, where he remained as the director until his retirement in 1994. In 1983 he joined the United States National Academy of Sciences.

Research

Cantoni discovered the biological mechanism of methylation using S-adenosylmethionine.

Home Life

Giulio Cantoni married Gabriella Cantoni and they had two daughters named Allegra and Serena. Before Cantoni died, he had four grand children, Ariella, Brendan, Ethan and Elliot.

gollark: Reducing moving parts is good I guess.
gollark: Maybe seed engineered viruses in the grass periodically to stop it growing.
gollark: I still feel like setting the grass on fire would be easier. I don't think lasers provide much of an advantage here if you want to actually cut it.
gollark: Evidently we need software to automatically replace potentially identifying information you reveal with randomized information instead.
gollark: Is it actually possible to make enough plutonium from the entire solar system's heavy metal stocks to noticeably affect its spectral lines?

References

  1. ^ Giulio Cantoni; NIH lab chief, biochemistry researcher; 89 THE WASHINGTON POST August 25, 2005
  1. ^ https://www.amazon.com/From-Milano-New-York-Hell/dp/059500475X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1332113187&sr=8-1


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