Rodney R. Porter AKA Rodney Robert Porter Born: 8-Oct-1917 Birthplace: Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire, England Died: 6-Sep-1985 Location of death: near Winchester, Hampshire, England Cause of death: Accident - Automobile
Gender: Male Religion: Methodist Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Scientist Nationality: England Executive summary: Chemical structure of antibodies Military service: British Army (1940-46, Maj.) British biochemist Rodney R. Porter was originally inspired by Karl Landsteiner's The Specificity of Serological Reactions, and he studied under Nobel laureate Frederick Sanger. His education was interrupted by World War II, in which Porter spent six years with the British Army, serving in Austria, Crete, Greece, and Italy, and rising to the rank of Major. His scientific career was focused on studying the immune response, and he was awarded the 1972 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, for his research into the chemical structure of antibodies. Porter's Nobel honors were shared with Gerald M. Edelman, who pursued similar research independently. Father: Joseph L. Porter (railroad clerk) Mother: Isobel Reese Porter Wife: Julia Frances New Porter (m. 1948) Son: Nigel Porter Son: Tim Porter Daughter: Susan Porter Daughter: Ruth Porter Daughter: Helen Porter
High School: Ashton-in-Makerfield Grammar School, Ashton-in-Makerfield, England (1935) University: BS Biochemistry, University of Liverpool (1939) University: PhD Biochemistry, Cambridge University (1948) Scholar: Cambridge University (1948-49) Scholar: National Institute for Medical Research (1949-60) Professor: Immunology, University of London (1960-67) Professor: Biochemistry, Oxford University (1967-85)
Nobel Prize for Medicine 1972 (with Gerald M. Edelman) National Academy of Sciences Royal Society
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