Felix Hoppe-Seyler

Ernst Felix Immanuel Hoppe-Seyler ( Felix Hoppe; 26 December 1825 – 10 August 1895) was a German physiologist and chemist, and the principal founder of the disciplines of biochemistry and molecular biology.

Felix Hoppe-Seyler
Felix Hoppe-Seyler
Born
Ernst Felix Immanuel Hoppe

(1825-12-26)December 26, 1825
DiedAugust 10, 1895(1895-08-10) (aged 69)
NationalityGerman
Alma mater
Scientific career
Fieldsphysiology
chemistry
Institutions
InfluencedAlbrecht Kossel
Friedrich Miescher
Hans Thierfelder
Wilhelm Kühne
Alexander Schmidt (physiologist)
Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen
Sergey Botkin
Eugen Baumann
August von Froriep
Oscar Liebreich
Ernst Leopold Salkowski

Biography

Hoppe-Seyler was born in Freyburg an der Unstrut in the Province of Saxony. He originally trained to be a physician in Halle and Leipzig, and received his medical doctorate from Berlin in 1851. Afterwards, he was an assistant to Rudolf Virchow at the Pathological Institute in Berlin. Hoppe-Seyler preferred scientific research to medicine, and later held positions in anatomy, applied chemistry, and physiological chemistry in Greifswald, Tübingen and Strasbourg. At Strasbourg, he was head of the department of biochemistry, the only such institution in Germany at the time.[1]

His work also led to advances in organic chemistry by his students and by immunologist Paul Ehrlich. Among his students and collaborators were Friedrich Miescher (1844–1895) and Nobel laureate Albrecht Kossel (1853–1927).[1]

Background

He was the son of the Freiburg superintendent (bishop) Ernst August Dankegott Hoppe. His mother died when he was six years old, and his father three years later. After he became an orphan, he lived for some time in the home of his older sister Klara and her husband, the Annaburg pastor Georg Seyler, a member of the noted Seyler family, a son of the pharmacist and Illuminati member Abel Seyler the Younger and a grandson of the theatre director Abel Seyler. He eventually entered the orphan asylum at Halle, where he attended the gymnasium. In 1864, he was formally adopted by Georg Seyler[2] and added the Seyler name to his birth name.[3][4]

In 1858, he married Agnes Franziska Maria Borstein, and they had one son, Georg Hoppe-Seyler, who became a professor of medicine in Kiel.

Contributions

Physiologische Chemie, 1877

Felix Hoppe-Seyler, a physiologist and chemist, became the principal founder of biochemistry. His text Physiological Chemistry became the standard text for this new branch of applied chemistry.[5]

His numerous investigations include studies of blood, hemoglobin, pus, bile, milk, and urine. Hoppe-Seyler was the first scientist to describe the optical absorption spectrum of the red blood pigment and its two distinctive absorption bands. He also recognized the binding of oxygen to erythrocytes as a function of hemoglobin, which in turn creates the compound oxyhemoglobin. Hoppe-Seyler was able to obtain hemoglobin in crystalline form, and confirmed that it contained iron.

He became an elected member of the French Academy of Sciences, despite the unfavorable political terms between France and Germany at that time, and this helped him gain an international reputation as the keen promoter of science.[6]

Hoppe-Seyler performed important studies of chlorophyll. He is also credited with the isolation of several different proteins (which he referred to as "proteids"). In addition, he was the first scientist to purify lecithin and establish its composition. In 1877, he founded the Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie (Journal for Physiological Chemistry), and was its editor until his death in 1895.[1] He died in Wasserburg am Bodensee in the Kingdom of Bavaria.

Selected written works

gollark: Well, if we feed them on hydrogen instead, they stoichiometrically can't.
gollark: Oh, and good news, your nonexistent APIONET node is exiled until it... nonexistently has TLS support.
gollark: Well, as they say.
gollark: It would be more efficient to directly burn the food or something.
gollark: Obviously the best way to produce power is to disassemble Mercury with von Neumann machines and turn it into vast arrays of solar powers and beamed power transmitters pointing at Earth.

References

  1. Jones, Mary Ellen (September 1953). "Albrecht Kossel, A Biographical Sketch". Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. National Center for Biotechnology Information. 26: 80–97. PMC 2599350. PMID 13103145.
  2. Neue deutsche Biographie Vol. 9 S. 615
  3. Theologischer Jahresbericht, Vol. 2, p. 200–201
  4. Albert P. Mathews, "The Life and Work of Felix Hoppe-Seyler," in Popular Science Monthly, Volume 53, August 1898
  5. "Hoppe-Seyler, Felix". Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  6. "Biological Chemistry". 1878-01-01. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
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