Everything about Rudolph Schoenheimer totally explained
Rudolph Schoenheimer (
May 10,
1898 –
September 11,
1941) was a
German/
U.S. biochemist who developed the technique of
isotope tagging of
biomolecules, enabling detailed study of
metabolism.
Born in
Berlin, after graduating in
medicine from the
Friedrich Wilhelm University there, he learned further
organic chemistry at the
University of Leipzig and then studied biochemistry at the
University of Freiburg.
In
1933, he moved to
Columbia University to join the department of Biological Chemistry and worked with
David Rittenberg, from the
radiochemistry laboratory of
Harold C. Urey, later together with
Konrad Bloch, using stable
isotopes to
tag foodstuffs and trace their metabolism within living things.
He further established that
cholesterol is a risk factor in
atherosclerosis.
His death was due to
suicide by
cyanide.
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