John Gaddum

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Sir John Gaddum
FRS FRSE
File:John Gaddum (1900-1965).tif
Born John Henry Gaddum
(1900-03-31)31 March 1900
Hale, Cheshire
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Cambridge, England
Nationality British
Fields Pharmacology
Institutions Cairo University
University College London
Porton Down
Alma mater Rugby School
Trinity College, Cambridge
Known for first scientist to postulate that 5-HT might have a role in mood regulation
Notable awards Fellow of the Royal Society[1]

Sir John Henry Gaddum FRS FRSE (31 March 1900 – 30 June 1965) was an English pharmacologist who discovered Substance P, a neuropeptide in 1931 along with Ulf von Euler.[1]

Early life and education

He was the son of silk merchant Henry Gaddum and his wife Phyllis.[2] He was educated at Moorland House School, Heswall, Cheshire, Rugby School and Trinity College, Cambridge.[2]

He completed his BSc in Physiology at the University of Cambridge in 1922, and his MD at University College London in 1925.[2]

Career

From 1927-33, Gaddum worked under Henry Dale at the National Institute for Medical Research, and helped develop the classical laws of drug antagonism. He showed that sympathetic nerves release adrenaline. Together with Ulf von Euler, he established the release of acetylcholine in autonomic ganglia.[2]

From 1933-35, Gaddum was professor of pharmacology at the University of Cairo. Subsequent to this he took up a chair at University College London, from 1935–38 and University of London from 1938-42.[2]

Gaddum was professor of pharmacology at the University of Edinburgh from 1942-58.[2]

He was director of the Institute of Animal Physiology (later Babraham Institute) from 1958-65.[2]

In the New Year Honours 1964 Gaddum was made appointed a Knight Bachelor.[3] and invested by HRH The Duke of Edinburgh.[2][4]

In experiments with lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), Gaddum explained how it causes mental disturbances by blocking the stimulating effects of serotonin.[2] He was the first scientist to postulate that 5-HT might have a role in mood regulation.[5]

Publications

Gaddum authored an advanced pharmacology text, "Gaddum's Pharmacology", which was considered definitive for decades.[2]

Military service

Gaddum served in the British Army from 1940–42, rising to Lieutenant Colonel.[2]

Personal life

In 1929, Gaddum married Iris Mary Harmer.[2]

References

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  3. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 43200. pp. 1–34. 31 December 1963.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 43250. p. 1563. 18 February 1964.
  5. Gaddum, J. H. (1957), SEROTONIN-LSD INTERACTIONS. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 66: 643–648.

External links

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