Dr. Hargobind Khorana was born on 9th January 1922 at
Raipur, Punjab (now in Pakistan). Dr.Khorana was responsible for producing the
first man-made gene in his laboratory in the early seventies. This historic
invention won him the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1968 sharing it with M.W.
Nuremberg and R.W. Holley for interpreting the genetic code and analyzing its
function in protein synthesis.
They all independently made contributions to the
understanding of the genetic code and how it works in the cell. Khorana, born
into a poor family attended D.A.V. High School in Multan, took his M.Sc from
Punjab University at Lahore and in 1945 he went to England on a government
scholarship and obtained a PhD from the University of Liverpool (1948). Dr.
Khorana spent a year in Zurich in 1948-49 as a post-doctoral fellow at the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and returned to India for a brief period
in 1949. He returned to England in 1950 and spent two years on a fellowship at
Cambridge and began research on nucleic acids under Sir Alexander Todd and
Kenner. His interest in proteins and nucleic acids took root at that time. In
1952 he went to the University of British Columbia, Vancouver on a job offer
and there a group began to work in the field of biologically interesting
phosphate esters and nucleic acids with the inspiration from Dr. Gordon M.
Shrum and Scientific counsel from Dr. Jack Campbell. In 1960 he joined the
University of Wisconsin as Professor and co-Director of the Institute of Enzyme
Research and Professor of Biochemistry (1962-70) and became an US citizen.
Khorana continued research on nucleic acid synthesis and prepared the first
artificial copy of a yeast gene. Dr. Khorana is also the first to synthesize
oligonucleotides, that is, strings of nucleotides. These custom designed pieces
of artificial genes are widely used in biology labs for sequencing, cloning and
engineering new plants and animals. The oligo nucleotides, thus, have become
indispensable tools in biotechnology.
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