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This article is about the biochemist. For the U.S. Senator from Michigan, see Spencer Abraham. Edward Penley Abraham, CBE, FRS (June 10, 1913 – 8 May 1999) was an English biochemist instrumental in the development of penicillin.[1]
[edit] LifeHe was born in Shirley, Southampton and attended King Edward VI School, Southampton before achieving a First in chemistry at The Queen’s College, Oxford. After completing his doctorate in Oxford, Abraham took up a position at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology. He became part of a research team led by Professor Howard Florey responsible for the development of penicillin and its medical applications. Sir Edward was specifically involved in the purification process and determination of its chemical structure. Florey formally recognised Abraham’s work in 1948 by nominating him to be one of the first three “penicillin” research Fellows at Lincoln College, Oxford. He was a Fellow of Lincoln until his retirement in 1980. Abraham was the recipient of many awards over his lifetime, including a CBE in 1973 and a knighthood in 1980. He was elected to the fellowship of the Royal Society in 1958. He died in May 1999, in Oxford, following a stroke. He was survived by his wife, Asbjörg.[2] [edit] AchievementsHe was a noted biochemist, his work on antibiotics producing great clinical advances. His principal work was concerned with the development of penicillin, and also later cephalosporin, an antibiotic capable of destroying penicillin-resistant bacteria. These vital drugs are now used extensively in the treatment of various infections, including pneumonia, bronchitis, septicaemia and infected surgical wounds. Through the registration of the patent on cephalosporin, he was able to generate a regular income, which he devoted almost entirely to the establishment of two charitable trusts for the support of biomedical research, the Edward Penley Abraham Research Fund[3] and the E P A Cephalosporin Fund.[4] By the end of the twentieth century, the charitable funds had donated more than £30m to the University of Oxford, mainly to the Dunn School of Pathology and to Lincoln College, along with other grants to The Royal Society and King Edward VI School, Southampton. Two recent Oxford buildings — the Edward Abraham research building (on South Parks Road) and the Lincoln EPA Science Centre (on Museum Road) — are named after him. [edit] References
[edit] External linksCategories: 1913 births | People from Southampton | 1999 deaths | Old Edwardians (Southampton) | Alumni of The Queen's College, Oxford | Fellows of Lincoln College, Oxford | English biochemists | English philanthropists | Fellows of the Royal Society | Commanders of the Order of the British Empire | Deaths from stroke | Royal Medal winners |
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