Har Gobind Khorana

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Har Gobind Khorana
هار گوبند خورانا
Har Gobind Khorana.jpg
Born (1922-01-09)January 9, 1922
Raipur,[1] British Punjab, British India (now Raipur, Pakistan)
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Concord, Massachusetts, U.S.
Residence India
United States
United Kingdom
Citizenship United States[2]
Fields Molecular biology
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Known for First to demonstrate the role of nucleotides in protein synthesis
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Signature
Har Gobind Khorana signature

Har Gobind Khorana, (Punjabi:هار گوبند خورانا) also called Hargobind Khorana, (January 9, 1922 – November 9, 2011)[4][5] was an Indian-American biochemist who shared the 1968 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Marshall W. Nirenberg and Robert W. Holley for research that showed how the order of nucleotides in nucleic acids, which carry the genetic code of the cell, control the cell’s synthesis of proteins. Khorana and Nirenberg were also awarded the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University in the same year.[6][7]

Khorana was born in Raipur, British India (today Tehsil Kabirwala, Punjab, Pakistan) and later moved to become Indian citizen after partition of 1947. He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1966,[2] and subsequently received the National Medal of Science. He served as MIT's Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Biology and Chemistry, Emeritus[8] and was a member of the Board of Scientific Governors at The Scripps Research Institute.

Research work

Ribonucleic acid (RNA) with three repeating units (UCUCUCU → UCU CUC UCU) produced two alternating amino acids. This, combined with the rachit and Leder experiment,[citation needed] showed that UCU codes for Serine and CUC codes for Leucine. RNAs with three repeating units (UACUACUA → UAC UAC UAC, or ACU ACU ACU, or CUA CUA CUA) produced three different strings of amino acids. RNAs with four repeating units including UAG, UAA, or UGA, produced only dipeptides and tripeptides thus revealing that UAG, UAA and UGA are stop codons.[citation needed]

With this, Khorana and his team had established that the mother of all codes, the biological language common to all living organisms, is spelled out in three-letter words: each set of three nucleotides codes for a specific amino acid. Their Nobel lecture was delivered on December 12, 1968.[9] Khorana was the first scientist to chemically synthesize oligonucleotides.[10]

Subsequent research

He extended the above to long DNA polymers using non-aqueous chemistry and assembled these into the first synthetic gene, using polymerase and ligase enzymes that link pieces of DNA together,[10] as well as methods that anticipated the invention of PCR.[11] These custom-designed pieces of artificial genes are widely used in biology labs for sequencing, cloning and engineering new plants and animals, and are integral to the expanding use of DNA analysis to understand gene-based human disease as well as human evolution. Khorana's invention(s) have become automated and commercialized so that anyone now can order a synthetic oligonucleotide or a gene from any of a number of companies. One merely needs to send the genetic sequence to one of the companies to receive an oligonucleotide with the desired sequence.

Since the middle of the 1970s, his lab has studied the biochemistry of bacteriorhodopsin, a membrane protein that converts light energy into chemical energy by creating a proton gradient.[12] Later, his lab went on to study the structurally related visual pigment known as rhodopsin.[13]

Awards and honours

Khorana was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1978.[3] The University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Government of India (DBT Department of Biotechnology), and the Indo-US Science and Technology Forum jointly created the Khorana Program in 2007. The mission of the Khorana Program is to build a seamless community of scientists, industrialists, and social entrepreneurs in the United States and India.

The program is focused on three objectives: Providing graduate and undergraduate students with a transformative research experience, engaging partners in rural development and food, security, and facilitating public-private partnerships between the U.S. and India. In 2009, Khorana was hosted by the Khorana Program and honored at the 33rd Steenbock Symposium in Madison, Wisconsin.[citation needed]

Death

Khorana died of natural causes on November 9, 2011 in Concord, Massachusetts, aged 89.[14] A widower since 2001, he was survived by his children Julia and Davel.[15]

References

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  15. Chandigarh mourns death of Nobel laureate Hargobind Khorana

External links