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Sir Hans Adolf Krebs (* 25. August 1900 in Hildesheim; † 22. November 1981 in Oxford [1]) war ein deutscher, später britischer Mediziner, Internist und Professor für Biochemie. Er war ein Pionier der Erforschung von biochemischen Prozessen in lebenden Zellen und entdeckte drei wichtige Schlüsselzyklen biochemischer ...
- 25. August 1900
- Krebs, Hans Adolf
- Hildesheim
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, FRS (/ k r ɛ b z, k r ɛ p s /, German: [hans ˈʔaːdɔlf ˈkʁeːps] ⓘ; 25 August 1900 – 22 November 1981) was a German-British biologist, physician and biochemist. He was a pioneer scientist in the study of cellular respiration , a biochemical process in living cells that extracts energy from food and ...
- German
- Paul, John, and Helen
20. März 2024 · Sir Hans Adolf Krebs was a German-born British biochemist who received (with Fritz Lipmann) the 1953 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for the discovery in living organisms of the series of chemical reactions known as the tricarboxylic acid cycle (also called the citric acid cycle, or Krebs.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Sir Hans Krebs is a German-born British biochemist who won the Nobel Prize in 1953 for his discoveries on the Krebs or citric acid cycle of intermediary metabolism. He was a professor at Cambridge, Oxford and Sheffield, and a Royal Medalist and a knight.
Hans Krebs was a German-British biochemist who discovered the citric acid cycle, a process of metabolism that produces energy for the cell. He shared the Nobel Prize in 1953 with Fritz Lipmann for their work on the citric acid cycle and other aspects of metabolism.
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs (* 25. August 1900 in Hildesheim; † 22. November 1981 in Oxford) war ein deutscher, später britischer Mediziner, Internist und Professor für Biochemie. Er war ein Pionier der Erforschung von biochemischen Prozessen in lebenden Zellen und entdeckte drei wichtige Schlüsselzyklen biochemischer Stoffwechselreaktionen.
Hans Adolf Krebs, Sohn eines jüdischen HNO- Arztes in Hildesheim, studierte ab 1918 Medizin in Göttingen, Freiburg, Berlin und München. 1924 in Hamburg promoviert war Krebs von 1926 bis 1930 als Assistent von Otto Warburg (Nobelpreisträger 1931) am Kaiser- Wilhelm-Institut für Biologie in Berlin tätig.