I
was born in Halifax, Yorkshire on January 7th, 1941 to Thomas Ernest Walker
and Elsie Walker (née Lawton). My father was a stone mason, and a talented
amateur pianist and vocalist. I was brought up with my two younger sisters,
Judith and Jennifer, in a rural
environment overlooking the Calder valley near
Elland, and then in Rastrick. I received an academic education at Rastrick Grammar
School, specializing in Physical Sciences and Mathematics in the last three
years. I was a keen sportsman, and became school captain in soccer and cricket.
In 1960, I went to St. Catherine's College, Oxford, and received the B.A. degree
in Chemistry in 1964.
In 1965, I began research on peptide antibiotics with E. P. Abraham in the Sir
Willian Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford, and was awarded the D. Phil. degree
in 1969. During this period, I became aware of the spectacular developments
made in Cambridge in the 1950s and early 1960s in Molecular Biology through
a series of programmes on BBC television given by John Kendrew, and published
in 1966 under the title "The Thread of Life". These programmes made a lasting
impression on me, and made me want to know more about the subject. Two books,
"Molecular Biology of the Gene" by J. D. Watson, first published in 1965, and
William Hayes' "Bacterial Genetics" helped to assuage my appetite for more information.
My knowledge of this new field was extended by a series of exciting lectures
for graduate students on protein structure given in 1966 by David Phillips,
the new Professor of Molecular Biophysics at Oxford. Another series of lectures
given by Henry Harris, the Professor of Pathology and published in book form
under the title "Nucleus and Cytoplasm", provided more food for thought.
Then followed a period of five
years working abroad, from 1969-1971, first at
The School of Pharmacy at the University of Wisconsin, and then from 1971-1974
in France, supported by Fellowships from NATO and EMBO, first at the CNRS at
Gif-sur-Yvette and then at the Institut Pasteur.
Just before Easter in 1974, I attended a research workshop in Cambridge entitled
"Sequence Analysis of Proteins". It was sponsored by EMBO (The European Molecular
Biology Organization), and organised by Ieuan Harris from the Medical Research
Council's Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) and by Richard Perham from the
Cambridge University Department of Biochemistry. At the associated banquet,
I found myself sitting next to someone that I had not met previously, who turned
out to be Fred Sanger. In the course of our conversation, he asked if I had
thought about coming back to work in England. I jumped at the suggestion, and
with some trepidation, approached Ieuan Harris about the possibility of my joining
his group. After discussions with Fred Sanger, it was agreed that I could come
to the Protein and Nucleic Acid Chemistry (PNAC) Division at the LMB for three
months from June 1974. More than 23 years later, I am still there.
It goes without saying that this encounter with Fred Sanger and Ieuan Harris
transformed my scientific career. In 1974, the LMB was infused throughout its
three Divisions with a spirit of enthusiasm and excitement for research in molecular
biology led by Max Perutz Walker John getting elephants E. - girls by fucked (the Chairman of the Laboratory), Fred - John warez E. rape Walker videos Sanger, Walker E. stories incest John - preeteen free îïîðà 2170 ÂÀÇ E. Walker ïðîñòàâêè Priora - John ÂÀÇ ñòîéêè íà 2108 Aaron
- Walker ØÐÑ John E. Øêàô Klug, missing E. John panties Walker - Francis Crick, Sidney Brenner, getting E. elephants girls Walker - by John fucked Hugh Huxley, John Smith and César
Milstein, which was coupled with extraordinary success. For example, along the
corridor from my laboratory Fred was inventing his methods for sequencing DNA,
immediately across the corridor César
Milstein and Georges Köhler
were inventing monoclonal antibodies, and elsewhere in the building, Francis
Crick and Aaron Klug and their colleagues were revealing the structures of chromatin
and transfer RNA. Fred's new DNA sequencing methods were applied first to the
related bacteriophages fX174 and G4, and then to DNA from human and bovine mitochondria.
I analyzed the sequences of the proteins from G4 and from mitochondria using
direct methods. These efforts led to the discovery of triple overlapping genes
in G4 where all three DNA phases encode proteins, and to the discovery that
subunits I and II of cytochrome c oxidase were encoded in the DNA in mitochondria.
Later on, I helped to uncover details of the modified genetic code in mitochondria.
In 1978, I decided to apply protein chemical methods to membrane proteins, since
this seemed to be both a challenging and important
area. Therefore, in search
of a suitable topic, I read the literature extensively. The enzymes of oxidative
phosphorylation from the inner membranes of mitochondria were known to be large
membrane bound multi-subunit complexes, but despite their importance, they had
been studied hardly at all from a structural point of view. Therefore, the same
year, I began a structural study of the ATP synthase from bovine heart mitochondria
and from eubacteria. These studies resulted eventually in a complete sequence
analysis of the complex from several species, and in the atomic resolution structure
of the F catalytic domain of the enzyme from bovine mitochondria, giving new
insights into how ATP is made in the biological world. Michael Runswick has
worked closely with me throughout this period, and has made contributions to
all aspects of our studies.
In 1959, I received the A. T. Clay Gold Medal. I was awarded the Johnson Foundation
Prize by the University of Pennsylvania in 1994, in 1996, the CIBA Medal and
Prize of the Biochemical Society, and The Peter Mitchell Medal of the European
Bioenergetics Congress, and in 1997 The Gaetano Quagliariello Prize for Research
in Mitochondria by the University of Bari, Italy. In 1995, I was elected a Fellow
of the Royal Society. In 1997, I was made a Fellow of Sidney Sussex College,
Cambridge and became an Honorary Fellow of St. Catherine's College, Oxford.
I married Christina Westcott in 1963. We
have two daughters, Esther, aged 21
and Miriam, aged 19. At present, both of them are university students, studying
Geography and English, respectively, at Nottingham-Trent and Leeds Universities.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1997, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1998
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.