Nobel prize winning DNA expert dies

Published October 28, 2007

WASHINGTON, Oct 27: Dr Arthur Kornberg, who won the 1959 Nobel Prize for figuring out how DNA is built, died on Friday of respiratory failure at the age of 89, Stanford University Hospital in California said.

Kornberg, professor emeritus of biochemistry at Stanford’s School of Medicine, shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Dr Severo Ochoa.

Kornberg was honoured for his work synthesizing DNA, the blueprint of heredity, and Ochoa for the synthesis of RNA, the genetic message derived from DNA.

“Dr Kornberg was one of the most distinguished and remarkable scientists in American medicine,” Dr Philip Pizzo, dean of the Stanford University School of Medicine, said in a statement.

“His towering contributions have continued virtually up until the time of his death.”

Kornberg’s son Roger Kornberg won his own Nobel last year, in chemistry.—Reuters

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