Bruce Merrifield – Biography
Bruce Merrifield was born in Fort Worth,
Texas, July 15, 1921, the only son of George E. and Lorene (Lucas)
Merrifield. In the spring of 1923 they drove across the southwest
desert to settle in California where they lived in several cities
throughout the state. He attended nine grade schools and two high
schools before graduating from Montebello High School in 1939.
His interest in chemistry began there and he also enjoyed the
astronomy club where he ground a mirror and built a small reflecting
telescope. As a senior he managed to be runner up in the annual
science contest and in the process learned a valuable lesson in
the scientific method.
College began at Pasadena Junior
College and at the end of two years he transferred to the
University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). After
graduation in chemistry he worked for a year at the Philip R. Park
Research Foundation taking care of an animal colony and assisting
with growth experiments on synthetic amino acid diets. One of these
was the experiment by Geiger that first demonstrated that the
essential amino acids must be present simultaneously for growth to
occur.
It soon became clear that more education was
necessary and he returned to graduate school at the UCLA chemistry
department with professor of biochemistry M.S. Dunn to develop
microbiological methods for the quantitation of the pyrimidines.
Graduation was on dune 19, 1949, on June 20 he and Elizabeth Furlong
were married, and on June 21 they left California for New York City
and the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.
At the
Institute, later Rockefeller University, he worked as an Assistant
for Dr. D.W. Woolley who was to have a profound influence on his
career. They worked on a dinucleotide growth factor he discovered in
graduate school and on peptide growth factors that Woolley had
discovered earlier. These studies led to the need for peptide
synthesis and, eventually, to the idea for solid phase peptide
synthesis in 1959. The development and application of the technique
have occupied him and his laboratory up to the present date. He is
very proud of the fact that his office was once occupied by the
great pioneer peptide chemist, Max Bergmann, and has been inspired
by the knowledge that his laboratories were once filled with names
like Leonidas Zervas, Joseph Fruton, Klaus Hoffmann, Emil Smith, William
Stein, and Stanford Moore.
In the meantime his wife,
Libby, who was a biologist by training, stayed home in Cresskill,
New Jersey, and raised their six children who now range in age from
19 to 32 years. They have been the great joy in the life of their
parents; and now Jim has a daughter, Kelly, who is the pride of the
whole family. Three years ago Libby joined the Merrifield laboratory
at Rockefeller University.
He was a Nobel Guest Professor at
Uppsala
University in 1968 and was elected a member of the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences in 1972. He has received several awards for his work on
peptide chemistry including the Lasker Award for Basic Medical
Research (1969), the Gairdner Award (1970), the Intra-Science Award
(1970), the American Chemical Society Award for Creative Work in
Synthetic Organic Chemistry (1972), the Nichols Medal (1973), the
Instrument Specialties Company Award of the University of Nebraska (1977), and the 2nd Alan E.
Pierce Award of the American Peptide Symposium (1979).
He
has received honorary degrees from the University of
Colorado (1969), Uppsala University (1970), Yale University
(1971), Newark College of Engineering (1972), the Medical College of Ohio
(1972), Colgate
University (1977), and Boston College (1984). In 1984 he was appointed
the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Professor of the Rockefeller
University.
From Les
Prix Nobel 1984.
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