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Gilbert Smithson Adair

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Nationality
  
United Kingdom

Died
  
1979


Name
  
Gilbert Adair

Fields
  
proteins

Notable awards
  
Royal Society

Alma mater
  
King's College, Cambridge

Known for
  
hemoglobin is a tetramer

Education
  
King's College, Cambridge

Gilbert Smithson Adair FRS (1896–1979) was an early protein scientist who used osmotic pressure measurements to establish that haemoglobin was a tetramer under physiological conditions. This conclusion led him to be the first to identify cooperative binding, in the context of oxygen binding to haemoglobin.

Personal life

Adair was born on 21 September 1896 in Whitehaven, England and was educated (1910-1915) at Bootham School, York. Entering King's College, Cambridge in 1915, he graduated with a first class degree in natural sciences in 1917. During the war, he worked on the Food Investigation Board, which sought methods for preserving food on cargo ships. In 1920, he became a research student at King's College, and was made an official Fellow in 1928, granting him five years to devote to research. In 1931, he became assistant director of the Physiological Laboratory in Cambridge. He was a Reader in Biophysics from 1945 until his retirement in 1963. Adair was made a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1939.

As an incidental historical note, Adair provided the purified haemoglobin that Max Perutz used for the first structure determination of any protein (by X-ray crystallography).

References

Gilbert Smithson Adair Wikipedia