Erwin Chargaff
{{Short description|American biochemist (1905–2002)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}}
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Erwin Chargaff
| image = Erwin Chargaff.jpg
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1905|08|11|df=y}}
| birth_place = Czernowitz, Duchy of Bukovina, Austria-Hungary
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2002|06|20|1905|08|11|df=y}}
| death_place = Manhattan, New York City, United States
| nationality = American (since 1940)
| fields = Biochemistry
| workplaces = Yale University (1925–1930), University of Berlin (1930–1933), Pasteur Institute (1933–1934), Columbia University (1935–1974), Roosevelt Hospital (1974–1992)
| doctoral_advisor = Fritz Feigl
| doctoral_students = Seymour S. Cohen, Boris Magasanik
| notable_students =
| known_for = Chargaff's rules
| awards = Pasteur Medal (1949), National Medal of Science (1974)
| signature = Erwin Chargaff signature.svg
| signature_alt = Erwin Chargaff signature.png
| spouse = {{Marriage|Vera Broido|1928|1995|end=died}}
| children = Thomas Chargaff
| education = Maximiliansgymnasium, Vienna College of Technology (1924–1928)
}}
Erwin Chargaff (11 August 1905 – 20 June 2002) was an Austro-Hungarian-born American biochemist, writer, and professor of biochemistry at Columbia University medical school.{{cite news |title=Erwin Chargaff: Disillusioned biochemist who pioneered our understanding of DNA |work=The Guardian|date=2 July 2002 |first=Pearce |last=Wright |url=https://www.theguardian.com/news/2002/jul/02/guardianobituaries.obituaries |access-date=22 November 2011}} A Bucovinian Jew who emigrated to the United States during the Nazi regime, he penned a well-reviewed{{cite journal |vauthors= Hecht F|date=1979 |title= Hecht F. Heraclitean fire. Sketches from a life before nature |journal= American Journal of Human Genetics |volume=31| issue = 6 |pages=759}}{{cite journal |vauthors= Edsall JT|date=1979 |title= Heraclitean fire. Sketches from a life before nature |journal= Isis |volume=70| issue = 2 |pages=276–277|doi=10.1086/352204 }} autobiography, Heraclitean Fire: Sketches from a Life Before Nature.{{Cite book |first=Erwin |last=Chargaff |title=Heraclitean Fire: Sketches from a Life Before Nature |year=1978 |publisher=Rockefeller University Press |isbn=0-874-70029-9 |page=252}}
Early life
Chargaff was born on 11 August 1905 to a Jewish family in Czernowitz, Duchy of Bukovina, Austria-Hungary, which is now Chernivtsi, Ukraine.{{cite book|first=Istvan|last=Hargittai|title=Candid Science: Conversations With Famous Chemists|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K_u3CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA15|date=26 January 2000|publisher=World Scientific|isbn=978-1-78326-214-4}}
At the outbreak of World War I, his family moved to Vienna, where he attended the Maximiliansgymnasium (now the Gymnasium Wasagasse). He then went on to the Vienna College of Technology (Technische Hochschule Wien) where he met his future wife Vera Broido.
From 1924 to 1928, Chargaff studied chemistry in Vienna, and earned a doctorate working under the direction of Fritz Feigl.{{cite book|url=http://www.bookrags.com/biography/erwin-chargaff-woc/|title=Erwin Chargaff Summary|via=www.bookrags.com}}{{cite journal |last1=Weintraub |first1=Bob |title=Erwin Chargaff and Chargaff's Rules |journal=Chemistry in Israel – Bulletin of the Israel Chemical Society |date=September 2006 |issue=22 |pages=29–31 |url=https://drive.goo-gle.com/file/d/13dBvbCTMVmko67B7GZGH7ck_HwIVmJ_2-rT7MbU_dqQUGQz6YeRpb-rY1ucz/edit?usp=sharing}}
He married Vera Broido in 1928. Chargaff had one son, Thomas Chargaff.
From 1925 to 1930, Chargaff served as the Milton Campbell Research fellow in organic chemistry at Yale University, but he did not like New Haven, Connecticut. Chargaff returned to Europe, where he lived from 1930 to 1934, serving first as the assistant in charge of chemistry for the department of bacteriology and public health at the University of Berlin (1930–1933) and then, being forced to resign his position in Germany as a result of the Nazi policies against Jews, as a research associate at the Pasteur Institute in Paris (1933–1934).
Columbia University
Chargaff immigrated to Manhattan, New York City in 1935,{{Cite journal|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1558287|jstor=1558287|title=Erwin Chargaff, 11 August 1905 · 20 June 2002|last1=Cohen|first1=Seymour S.|journal=Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society|year=2004|volume=148|issue=2|pages=222–228}} taking a position as a research associate in the department of biochemistry at Columbia University, where he spent most of his professional career. Chargaff became an assistant professor in 1938 and a professor in 1952. After serving as department chair from 1970 to 1974, Chargaff retired as professor emeritus. After his retirement as professor emeritus, Chargaff moved his lab to Roosevelt Hospital, where he continued to work until his retirement in 1992.{{citation needed|date=December 2011}}
He became an American citizen in 1940.
During his time at Columbia, Chargaff published numerous scientific papers, dealing primarily with the study of nucleic acids such as DNA using chromatographic techniques. He became interested in DNA in 1944 after Oswald Avery identified the molecule as the basis of heredity.{{cite journal|last1=Avery|first1=Oswald T.|last2=MacLeod|first2=Colin M.|last3=McCarty|first3=Maclyn|title=Studies on the Chemical Nature of the Substance Inducing Transformation of Pneumococcal Types – Induction of Transformation by a Desoxyribonucleic Acid Fraction Isolated from Pneumococcus Type III|journal=Journal of Experimental Medicine|date=February 1, 1944|volume=79|issue=2|pages=137–158|pmid=19871359|pmc=2135445|doi=10.1084/jem.79.2.137}}{{cite journal |doi=10.1038/nature01398|title=Discovering genes are made of DNA |year=2003 |last1=McCarty |first1=Maclyn |journal=Nature |volume=421 |issue=6921 |page=406 |pmid=12540908 |bibcode=2003Natur.421..406M|s2cid=4335285|doi-access=free }} Cohen says that "Almost alone among the scientists of this time, Chargaff accepted the unusual Avery paper and concluded that genetic differences among DNAs must be reflected in chemical differences among these substances. He was actually the first biochemist to reorganize his laboratory to test this hypothesis, which he went on to prove by 1949." Chargaff said of the Avery discovery: "I saw before me (in 1944), in dark contours, the beginning of a grammar of biology", and in 1950 he published a paper with the conclusion that the amounts of adenine and thymine in DNA were roughly the same, as were the amounts of cytosine and guanine.{{cite journal|last1=Chargaff|first1=Erwin|first2=Stephen |last2=Zamenhof |first3=Charlotte |last3=Green |title=Composition of human desoxypentose nucleic acid|journal=Nature|date=May 1950|volume=165|issue=4202|pages=756–7|pmid=15416834|bibcode = 1950Natur.165..756C |doi = 10.1038/165756b0 |s2cid=33722052}} This later became known as the first of Chargaff's rules. Instrumental in his DNA discoveries were the innovation of paper chromatography,{{cite journal |doi=10.1042/bj0380224|title=Qualitative analysis of proteins: A partition chromatographic method using paper|year=1944|last1=Consden|first1=R.|last2=Gordon|first2=A. H.|last3=Martin|first3=A. J. P.|journal=Biochemical Journal|volume=38|issue=3|pages=224–232|pmid=16747784|pmc=1258072}} and the commercially-available ultraviolet spectrophotometer tool.
Chargaff lectured about his results at Cambridge University in 1952, with Watson and Crick in attendance.{{cite book|first=Frederick|last=Betz|title=Managing Science: Methodology and Organization of Research|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ARRexcXgAgC&pg=PA82|date=30 November 2010|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|isbn=978-1-4419-7488-4}}
Chargaff's rules
Key conclusions from Erwin Chargaff's work are now known as Chargaff's rules. The first and best known achievement was to show that in natural DNA the number of guanine units equals the number of cytosine units and the number of adenine units equals the number of thymine 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 the base pair makeup of the DNA, although Chargaff did not explicitly state this connection himself. For this research, Chargaff is credited with disproving the tetranucleotide hypothesis{{cite journal | title = Yeast nucleic acid | last= Levine | first = P.A. | journal = Biochem. Z. | date = 1909 | volume= 17 | pages= 120–131
}} (Phoebus Levene's widely accepted hypothesis that DNA was composed of a large number of repeats of GACT). Most researchers 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 did his experiments with the newly developed paper chromatography and ultraviolet spectrophotometer. Chargaff met Francis Crick and James D. Watson at Cambridge in 1952, and, despite not getting along with them personally,{{cite book |title=Landmark Experiments in Molecular Biology|author=Michael Fry|date=2016|publisher=Academic Press|page=220|isbn=978-0-12-802074-6}} he explained his findings to them. Chargaff's research would later help the Watson and Crick laboratory team 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 than protein.{{cite book |last1=Baianu |first1=I.C. |title=Mathematical and Theoretical Biology. Volume 2 – Mathematical and Molecular Biophysics |date=2 February 2010 |publisher=I.C. Baianu |url=https://archive.org/details/MathematicalAndMolecularBiophysics-quantumPhysicsAndTechniques/AMathMolBiophys_Vol2p328/mode/2up}}
Later life
Beginning in the 1950s, Chargaff became increasingly outspoken about the failure of the field of molecular biology, claiming that molecular biology was "running riot and doing things that can never be justified".{{Cite book|title=DNA Technology: A Reference Handbook, 2nd Edition|last=Newton|first=David E.|date=2016-12-12|page=189|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9781440850486|language=en|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ogypDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA189}} He believed that human knowledge will always be limited in relation to the complexity of the natural world, and that it is simply dangerous when humans believe that the world is a machine, even assuming that humans can have full knowledge of its workings. He also believed that in a world that functions as a complex system of interdependency and interconnectedness, genetic engineering of life will inevitably have unforeseen consequences.
After Francis Crick, James Watson and Maurice Wilkins received the 1962 Nobel Prize for their work on discovering the double helix of DNA, Chargaff withdrew from his lab and wrote to scientists all over the world about his exclusion.{{cite news |title=No Nobel Prize for Whining |last=Judson |first=Horace |date=20 October 2003 |work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/20/opinion/no-nobel-prize-for-whining.html |access-date=2007-08-03}}
Chargaff warned in his 1978 book Heraclitean Fire of a "molecular Auschwitz" that "the technology of genetic engineering poses a greater threat to the world than the advent of nuclear technology. An irreversible attack on the biosphere is something so unheard of, so unthinkable to previous generations, that I only wish that mine had not been guilty of it".{{Cite web|url=http://phyllisbowman.blogspot.com/2011/08/gigantic-slaughterhouse.html|title = Check the Facts: "A Gigantic Slaughterhouse ..."|date = August 2011}}{{cite book |doi=10.1007/978-1-4614-8541-4_12|chapter=Genetic Engineering|title=Healthcare and Biomedical Technology in the 21st Century|year=2014|last1=Baran|first1=George R.|last2=Kiani|first2=Mohammad F.|last3=Samuel|first3=Solomon Praveen|pages=383–416|isbn=978-1-4614-8540-7}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.iatp.org/news/eminent-scientists-comment-on-the-dangers-of-genetically-engineered-foods|title=Eminent Scientists Comment on the Dangers of Genetically Engineered Foods}}
{{quotation|text=Helping a few couples condemned to childlessness towards getting a child may strike the obstetrical cytologist as such a laudable step, but we can see the beginning of human husbandry, of industrial breeding factories... Who can deny the scientific interest attaching to the production of chimaeras, to the study of human embryonic growth in an animal uterus? ... What I see coming is a gigantic slaughterhouse, a molecular Auschwitz, in which valuable enzymes, hormones and so on will be extracted instead of gold teeth.|sign=Erwin Chargaff |source=Heraclitean Fire}}
The IVF technique earned his scathing disapprobation. In 1987, "Engineering a Molecular Nightmare" was published in the journal Nature,{{cite journal |doi=10.1038/327199a0|title=Engineering a molecular nightmare|year=1987|last1=Chargaff|first1=Erwin|journal=Nature|volume=327|issue=6119|pages=199–200|pmid=3472081|bibcode=1987Natur.327..199C|s2cid=28373983}} which was then sent by David Alton and his colleagues in the All-Party Parliamentary Pro-Life Group (APPPLG) to every Westminster MP in an effort to minimise the forthcoming harm caused by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990.
Chargaff wrote in 2002 that "There are two nuclei that man should never have touched: the atomic nucleus and the cell nucleus. The technology of genetic engineering poses a greater threat to the world than the advent of nuclear technology."{{cite news |last1=Serra |first1=Miquel Àngel |title="Genetics and human improvement" |url=https://www.fundaciogrifols.org/en/web/fundacio/calendar/-/bscw_activities/37546777 |publisher=Fundacio Víctor Grífols i Lucas Foundation |date=20 February 2018}}
{{quote|My life has been marked by two immense and fateful discoveries: the splitting of the atom, the recognition of the chemistry of heredity and its subsequent manipulation. It is the mistreatment of nucleus that, in both instances, lies at the basis: the nucleus of the atom, the nucleus of the cell. In both instances do I have the feeling that science has transgressed a barrier that should have remained inviolate. As happens often in science, the first discoveries were made by thoroughly admirable men, but the crowd that came right after had a more mephitic smell.|source=Chargaff in Weintraub (2002)}}
Chargaff died later that year on 20 June 2002 in Manhattan, New York City.{{cite news |first=Nicholas |last=Wade |title=Erwin Chargaff, 96, Pioneer In DNA Chemical Research |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/06/30/nyregion/erwin-chargaff-96-pioneer-in-dna-chemical-research.html |quote=Erwin Chargaff, whose research into the chemical composition of DNA helped lay the groundwork for James Watson and Francis Crick's discovery of its double-helix structure — the pivotal finding of 20th-century biology — died on June 20 in a New York hospital. He was 96. |newspaper=The New York Times |date=June 30, 2002 |access-date=2014-12-23 }} He is buried in Mount Carmel Cemetery (Queens).[https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/95983059/erwin-chargaff Erwin Chargaff in Findagrave.com]
Honors
Honors awarded to him include the Pasteur Medal (1949); Carl Neuberg Medal (1958);{{cite book |doi=10.1142/9781860943836_0003|chapter=Erwin Chargaff|title=Candid Science|year=2000|pages=14–28|isbn=978-1-86094-151-1}} Charles Leopold Mayer Prize;{{Cite web|url=https://www.knaw.nl/nl/prijzen/laureaten/dr-h-p-heinekenprijs-voor-biochemie-en-biofysica/erwin-chargaff-usa|title=Erwin Chargaff, USA — KNAW}} inaugural Heineken Prize (Amsterdam, 1964); Gregor Mendel Medal (Halle, 1968); and the National Medal of Science (1974).{{cite web|url=https://www.nsf.gov/od/nms/recip_details.jsp?recip_id=74|title=The President's National Medal of Science: Recipient Details – NSF – National Science Foundation|website=www.nsf.gov}}
Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1961), the National Academy of Sciences (1965), and the American Philosophical Society (1979){{cite journal |journal=Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society
|volume=148 |issue=4 |url=http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/chargaff-erwin.pdf |last=Cohen |first=Seymour Stanley |title=Erwin Chargaff 1905 – 2002: A Biographical Memoir by Seymour Cohen with selected bibliography by Robert Lehman}} and the German Academy of Sciences.
Honorary Doctorate awarded by Columbia University in 1975.
Books authored
- {{Cite book |first=Erwin |last=Chargaff |title=Heraclitean Fire: Sketches from a Life Before Nature |year=1978 |publisher=Rockefeller University Press |isbn=0-874-70029-9 |page=252}}
- Unbegreifliches Geheimnis. Wissenschaft als Kampf für und gegen die Natur. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1980, {{ISBN|3-608-95452-X}}
- Bemerkungen. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1981, {{ISBN|3-12-901631-7}}
- Warnungstafeln. Die Vergangenheit spricht zur Gegenwart. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1982, {{ISBN|3-608-95004-4}}
- Kritik der Zukunft. Essay. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1983, {{ISBN|3-608-93576-2}}
- Zeugenschaft. Essays über Sprache und Wissenschaft. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1985, {{ISBN|3-608-95373-6}}
- Serious Questions, An ABC of Sceptical Reflections. Boston, Basel, Stuttgart: Birkhäuser, 1986
- Abscheu vor der Weltgeschichte. Fragmente vom Menschen. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1988, {{ISBN|3-608-93531-2}}
- Alphabetische Anschläge. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1989, {{ISBN|3-608-95646-8}}
- Vorläufiges Ende. Ein Dreigespräch. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1990, {{ISBN|3-608-95443-0}}
- Vermächtnis. Essays. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1992, {{ISBN|3-608-95851-7}}
- Über das Lebendige. Ausgewählte Essays. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1993, {{ISBN|3-608-95976-9}}
- Armes Amerika – Arme Welt. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1994, {{ISBN|3-608-93291-7}}
- Ein zweites Leben. Autobiographisches und andere Texte. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1995, {{ISBN|3-608-93313-1}}
- Die Aussicht vom dreizehnten Stock. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1998, {{ISBN|3-608-93433-2}}
- Brevier der Ahnungen. Eine Auswahl aus dem Werk. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 2002, {{ISBN|3-608-93513-4}}
- Stimmen im Labyrinth. Über die Natur und ihre Erforschung. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 2003, {{ISBN|3-608-93580-0}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- [https://search.amphilsoc.org/collections/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C37-ead.xml Erwin Chargaff Papers], American Philosophical Society
- [http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/medicalscience/story/0%2C9837%2C747814%2C00.html Chargaff obituary] from The Guardian, 2 July 2002
- [https://www.smh.com.au/national/man-who-opened-the-door-to-dna-20020712-gdfg1s.html Chargaff obituary] from The Sydney Morning Herald, 12 July 2002
- {{cite book |author1=Watson, James D. |author2=Baker, Tania A. |author3=Bell, Stephen B. |author4=Gann, Alexander |author5=Levine, Michael |author6=Losick, Richard | title=Molecular Biology of the Gene | edition= 5th | publisher=Benjamin Cummings | year=2004 | isbn=0-8053-4635-X}}
- [http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/192/1/223.pdf The composition of the deoxyribonucleic acid of salmon sperm] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090326223254/http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/192/1/223.pdf |date=26 March 2009 }} by E. Chargaff, R. Lipshitz, C. Green and M. E. Hodes in Journal of Biological Chemistry (1951) volume 192 pages 223–230.
- {{cite book | author=Watson, James D. | title=The Double Helix: A personal account of the discovery of the structure of DNA | url=https://archive.org/details/doublehelixpers00wats_0 | url-access=registration | publisher=Norton | orig-year= orig. 1968 | edition= critical| year=1980 | isbn=0-393-01245-X}}
External links
{{wikiquote}}
- {{Cite web |title=Erwin Chargaff – Biography, Facts and Pictures |author=Famous Scientists |work=famousscientists.org |date=9 August 2016 |access-date=8 August 2021 |url= https://www.famousscientists.org/erwin-chargaff/}}
- [http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfo1.htm How Genetics Got a Chemical Education] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210195513/http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfo1.htm |date=10 February 2012 }}. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (1979), 325, 345–360.
- [https://drive.google.com/file/d/13dBvbCTMVmko67B7GZGH7ck_HwIVmJ_2-rT7MbU_dqQUGQz6YeRpb-rY1ucz/edit?usp=sharing Weintraub, B. (2006). Erwin Chargaff and Chargaff's Rules.] Chemistry in Israel, Bulletin of the Israel Chemical Society. (Sept. 2006), 22, 29–31.
- [http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/specialcollections/coll/pauling/dna/people/chargaff.html Key Participants: Erwin Chargaff] – Linus Pauling and the Race for DNA: A Documentary History
- [http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/chargaff-erwin.pdf National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir]
{{Winners of the National Medal of Science|biological}}
{{Heineken Prizes}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chargaff, Erwin}}
Category:Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
Category:Columbia University faculty
Category:National Medal of Science laureates
Category:Jews from Austria-Hungary
Category:Scientists from Chernivtsi
Category:People from the Duchy of Bukovina
Category:Winners of the Heineken Prize
Category:Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United States