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John Jacob Abel

John Jacob Abel (19 May 1857 – 26 May 1938) was an American biochemist and pharmacologist. He established the pharmacology department at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1893, and then became America's first full-time professor of pharmacology.[2] During his time at Hopkins, he made several important medical advancements, especially in the field of hormone extraction. In addition to his laboratory work, he founded several significant scientific journals such as the Journal of Biological Chemistry and the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.[3]

John Jacob Abel
Born(1857-05-19)May 19, 1857
DiedMay 26, 1938(1938-05-26) (aged 81)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Michigan (PhB)
University of Strasbourg (MD)
Spouse
(m. 1883)
Children3
AwardsForeign Member of the Royal Society[1]
Willard Gibbs Award (1927)
Scientific career
FieldsBiochemistry, pharmacology
InstitutionsJohns Hopkins School of Medicine
Signature

Early life and education edit

John Jacob Abel was born in 1857 to George M. and Mary (Becker) Abel[4] near Cleveland, Ohio.[5] He earned his Ph.B. (Bachelor of Philosophy) from the University of Michigan where he studied under Henry Sewall in 1883. But, during this time he took several years off to serve as a principal of the high school in La Porte, Indiana.[6] There he taught many subjects ranging from chemistry and physics to Latin.[7] He then went to Johns Hopkins University, where he studied under Henry Newell Martin, a cardiac physiologist and professor of biology.[3][8] He then left for Europe, starting in Leipzig studying medical sciences, then traveling to Strasbourg where he was about to receive his Ph.D., but instead decided to receive an M.D. in 1888 from the University of Strasbourg.[2]

After his doctorate, Abel worked mostly in clinical studies and took clinical courses, focusing on biochemistry and pharmacology. He traveled around Europe, mostly in Germany and central Europe, conducting research in biochemistry.[2] During this time, Abel had a number of mentors that inspired his work and exposed him to a number of disciplines that eventually prompted him to work in biochemistry and pharmacology. Starting in 1884, Abel worked with doctors Ludwig von Frey in physiology and histology, Rudolf Boehm in pharmacology, Adolph Strümpell in pathology, and Johannes Wislicenus in organic and inorganic chemistry.[7] All of this work was done in Leipzig until 1886, until Abel moved on to Strasbourg, where he again worked in various fields: internal medicine with Adolph Kussmaul, and Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen in infectious disease and pathology. Eventually, Abel moved back to Strasbourg where he worked more with Oswald Schmiedeberg among others.[7] Schmeidberg, however, sparked his interest in pharmacological research. Lastly, he worked in a biochemical laboratory in Berne, where he met one Arthur Robertson Cushny, who eventually worked with him at Michigan.[7]

Career edit

Finishing his time in Europe, Abel returned to the University of Michigan as the chair of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. There, he played an important role in developing the first pharmacology department in North America.[9] He only was at the University of Michigan until 1893, when William Osler of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine asked Abel to come to the school and accept a Professorship of Pharmacology.[3]

At Johns Hopkins, Abel was the chair of pharmacology and biological chemistry, until the departments split in 1908, when Abel became the chair solely of the Department of Pharmacology.[7] At Johns Hopkins, Abel performed his most groundbreaking research and held the position of chair of the department until he retired at the age of 75 in 1932.[3]

Isolation of epinephrine edit

Ever since his early years in Europe, Abel showed great interest in isolating pure form of internal gland hormones. The first work that led to his international reputation as a pharmacologist and biochemist was the isolation of epinephrine from adrenal medulla. However, he was only able to isolate a monobenzoyl derivative of epinephrine. While he was improving his processes on decomposing the benzoyl derivative to obtain salts of epinephrine using saponification, a Japanese chemist J. Takamine, who had visited his lab, was able to successfully isolate the neutral base of epinephrine by adding ammonium to highly concentrated extract, a method Abel himself tried but failed due to the use of low concentration of extract.[10] After Takamine's success, Abel himself remarked, with great candor, "The efforts of years on my part in this once mysterious field of suprarenal, medullary biochemistry, marred by blunders as they were, eventuated, then, in the isolation of the hormone not in the form of the free base but in that of its monobenzoyl derivative."[10]

Devising early form of dialysis machine edit

Together with L.G. Rowntree and B.B. Turner, Abel devised what they called a "vividiffusion" apparatus, consisting of a series of tubes surrounded by fluid. They first demonstrated the apparatus at the Physiological Congress in Groningen in 1914.[10] By allowing arterial blood to enter at one end of the connection, and later return to circulation through the venous connection after dialysis, they were able to demonstrate the existence of free amino acids in blood. By isolating these amino acids from blood circulation, Abel conducted various subsequent researches on the structure of proteins in the blood. Not only did Abel use the apparatus for his research work, he also realized the great clinical potential such dialysis machine would have on managing the damaging effects of renal failure.[11] The vividiffusion apparatus Abel devised is the precursor to the modern day dialysis machine. He summarized his work in a paper published in 1913, "On the Removal of Diffusable Substances from the Circulating Blood by Means of Dialysis" by Transfusion Science.[12]

Crystallization of insulin edit

 
Insulin crystals

Abel's work on insulin started with an invitation from his old friend Arthur A. Noyes at California Institute of Technology. Noyes had just received a grant from the Carnegie Corporation for research on insulin, and he thought that Abel would be the right person to lead that research. After some preliminary experiments on the subject, Abel decided to take on the research, and replied to his friend, "Will attack insulin. Writing. J. J. Abel."[13] Abel invested the next few years on purifying insulin. While he was trying various means to purify insulin, he had the idea to measure sulfur content of his extracts and found that the higher the sulfur content, the greater the activity. The discovery not only significantly precipitated progress on extracting active fractions but also offered the very first concrete information on the structure of insulin—sulfur is an integral part of insulin molecules.[13] Continuing with his research on extracting insulin, in November 1925, Abel finally was able to witness one of the most beautiful sights of his life, "glistening crystals of insulin forming on the sides of a test tube".[13] While at the California Institute of Technology, Abel completed an article in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences entitled "Crystalline Insulin" in 1926.[14] Although Abel's work received great compliments from the media and the science community, some doubted the purity of his crystals as preliminary tests revealed that they were in fact proteins.[13] The test result was contrary to the dominant view at the time on proteins—proteins were considered as unlikely to have such highly specific physiological activity shown by a hormone such as insulin.[13] In 1927, he was published in the journal Science for this work with a paper entitled "Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones".[15] At the time, Abel's laboratory was no doubt the center of insulin research in the United States. A lot of young scientists came to his lab and worked under Abel to study the newly crystallized hormone. Abel himself gradually withdrew from the actual experimental work on insulin after the first four years, but he continued to guide the scientists in his lab to unravel more and more about the structure of insulin molecule.[13]

Founding scientific journals edit

Despite his great dedication to experimentation work, Abel's historical significance is certainly not restricted to his research work. He was also the founder of a number of influential scientific journals. As more and more research was conducted in the field of biochemistry, Abel realized the importance of having a platform that allowed scientists all around the world to publish their work and report on their findings. He therefore asked his friend Dr. C. A. Herter, Professor of Pharmacology at Columbia University, for help on founding a scientific journal on biochemistry. Together as joint editors, Abel and Herter established the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The first issue of the journal appeared in 1905.[10] Motivated by the very same goal of trying to create an outlet for a wide dissemination of new scientific findings, he later founded the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics in 1908.[10]

Publications edit

  • Abel JJ, Rowntree LG, Turner BB. Plasma removal with return of corpuscles (plasmaphaeresis). The Journal of Pharmacology and experimental therapeutics Vol. V. No. 6, July, 1914. Transfusion Science. 11: 166-77.[16]
  • Abel JJ, Rowntree LG, Turner BB. On the removal of diffusable substances from the circulating blood by means of dialysis. Transactions of the Association of American Physicians, 1913. Transfusion Science. 11: 164-5.[12]
  • Abel JJ. Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones. Science, 1927. Science. 66: 337-346.[15]
  • Abel JJ. Arthur Robertson Cushny And Pharmacology. Science, 1926. Science. 63: 507-515.[17]
  • Abel JJ. Crystalline Insulin. 1926. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 12 (2): 132-136.[14]
  • Abel JJ. Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for more Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator. Science. 1915. Science. 42: 135-147.[18]
  • Abel JJ. Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for more Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator. II. Science. 1915. Science. 42: 165-178.[19]

Degrees, awards, honors edit

Degrees edit

Honorary degrees edit

Awards edit

  • Research Corporation Prize, 1925
  • Lectureship of Kober Foundation, 1925
  • Willard Gibbs Gold Medal by the Chicago Section of the American Chemical Society, 1927
  • Gold Medal, Society of Apothecaries, London, 1928
  • Conné Medal, New York Chemists' Club, 1932
  • Kober Medal, 1934[7]

Honors edit

Private life edit

Abel married Mary Hinman in 1883. They met while he was a principal and she was a school teacher in La Porte, Indiana.[7] They had three children, one of whom was a daughter who died as an infant in 1888 in Strasbourg. The other two, George H. Abel and Robert Abel of Philadelphia and Boston, respectively, survived into adulthood. Mary Abel and John Abel both passed in 1938; Mary in January and John in May due to a coronary thrombosis.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Dale, H. H. (1939). "John Jacob Abel. 1857-1938". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 2 (7): 577–585. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1939.0019.
  2. ^ a b c "Abel, John Jacob". Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  3. ^ a b c d "The John Jacob Abel Collection". Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives. Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  4. ^ "Abel, John Jacob". Who Was Who Among North American Authors, 1921-1939. Detroit: Gale Research Co. 1976. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-8103-1041-4.
  5. ^ "John Jacob Abel AMERICAN PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMIST". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  6. ^ Voegtlin, Carl (1939-12-01). "John Jacob Abel 1857-1938". Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. 67 (4): 373–406. ISSN 0022-3565.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i MacNider, WM. deB. (1946). Biographical Memoir of John Jacob Abel. National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America: Biographical Memoirs. pp. 231–238.
  8. ^ Fye, Bruce W. (1993). Profiles in Cardiology: H. Newell Martin. pp. 631–632.
  9. ^ "About Us | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor". medicine.umich.edu. 2 October 2014. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  10. ^ a b c d e Macnider, WM. National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir of John Jacob Abel. The National Academies Press. pp. 11, 16, 17.
  11. ^ ""Abel, John Jacob." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography.". Encyclopedia.com.
  12. ^ a b Abel, J. J.; Rowntree, L. G.; Turner, B. B. (1990-01-01). "On the removal of diffusable substances from the circulating blood by means of dialysis. Transactions of the Association of American Physicians, 1913". Transfusion Science. 11 (2): 164–165. ISSN 0955-3886. PMID 10160880.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Jane H. Murnaghan, Paul Talalay. John Jacob Abel and the Crystallization of Insulin, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, Volume 10, Number 3, pp. 340, 343, 345, 346, 368, 369. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  14. ^ a b Abel, John J. (2017-05-02). "Crystalline Insulin". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 12 (2): 132–136. doi:10.1073/pnas.12.2.132. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 1084434. PMID 16587069.
  15. ^ a b Abel, John Jacob (14 October 1927). "Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones". Science. 66 (1711): 337–346. Bibcode:1927Sci....66..337A. doi:10.1126/science.66.1711.337. PMID 17834012.
  16. ^ Abel, J. J.; Rowntree, L. G.; Turner, B. B. (1990-01-01). "Plasma removal with return of corpuscles (plasmaphaeresis). The Journal of Pharmacology and experimental therapeutics Vol. V. No. 6, July, 1914". Transfusion Science. 11 (2): 166–177. ISSN 0955-3886. PMID 10160881.
  17. ^ Abel, J. J. (1926-05-21). "Arthur Robertson Cushny and Pharmacology". Science. 63 (1638): 507–515. Bibcode:1926Sci....63..507A. doi:10.1126/science.63.1638.507. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17739266.
  18. ^ Abel, J. J. (1915-07-30). "Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for More Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator". Science. 42 (1074): 135–147. Bibcode:1915Sci....42..135A. doi:10.1126/science.42.1074.135. hdl:2027/hvd.32044106206626. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17797940.
  19. ^ Abel, J. J. (1915-08-06). "Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for More Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator. Ii". Science. 42 (1075): 165–178. Bibcode:1915Sci....42..165A. doi:10.1126/science.42.1075.165. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17758865.
  20. ^ "John J. Abel". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  21. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-10-31.

External links edit

  •   Media related to John Jacob Abel at Wikimedia Commons
  • National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir

john, jacob, abel, 1857, 1938, american, biochemist, pharmacologist, established, pharmacology, department, johns, hopkins, university, school, medicine, 1893, then, became, america, first, full, time, professor, pharmacology, during, time, hopkins, made, seve. John Jacob Abel 19 May 1857 26 May 1938 was an American biochemist and pharmacologist He established the pharmacology department at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1893 and then became America s first full time professor of pharmacology 2 During his time at Hopkins he made several important medical advancements especially in the field of hormone extraction In addition to his laboratory work he founded several significant scientific journals such as the Journal of Biological Chemistry and the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 3 John Jacob AbelBorn 1857 05 19 May 19 1857Cleveland Ohio U S DiedMay 26 1938 1938 05 26 aged 81 NationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of Michigan PhB University of Strasbourg MD SpouseMary Hinman m 1883 wbr Children3AwardsForeign Member of the Royal Society 1 Willard Gibbs Award 1927 Scientific careerFieldsBiochemistry pharmacologyInstitutionsJohns Hopkins School of MedicineSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Isolation of epinephrine 2 2 Devising early form of dialysis machine 2 3 Crystallization of insulin 2 4 Founding scientific journals 2 5 Publications 3 Degrees awards honors 3 1 Degrees 3 1 1 Honorary degrees 3 2 Awards 3 3 Honors 4 Private life 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education editJohn Jacob Abel was born in 1857 to George M and Mary Becker Abel 4 near Cleveland Ohio 5 He earned his Ph B Bachelor of Philosophy from the University of Michigan where he studied under Henry Sewall in 1883 But during this time he took several years off to serve as a principal of the high school in La Porte Indiana 6 There he taught many subjects ranging from chemistry and physics to Latin 7 He then went to Johns Hopkins University where he studied under Henry Newell Martin a cardiac physiologist and professor of biology 3 8 He then left for Europe starting in Leipzig studying medical sciences then traveling to Strasbourg where he was about to receive his Ph D but instead decided to receive an M D in 1888 from the University of Strasbourg 2 After his doctorate Abel worked mostly in clinical studies and took clinical courses focusing on biochemistry and pharmacology He traveled around Europe mostly in Germany and central Europe conducting research in biochemistry 2 During this time Abel had a number of mentors that inspired his work and exposed him to a number of disciplines that eventually prompted him to work in biochemistry and pharmacology Starting in 1884 Abel worked with doctors Ludwig von Frey in physiology and histology Rudolf Boehm in pharmacology Adolph Strumpell in pathology and Johannes Wislicenus in organic and inorganic chemistry 7 All of this work was done in Leipzig until 1886 until Abel moved on to Strasbourg where he again worked in various fields internal medicine with Adolph Kussmaul and Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen in infectious disease and pathology Eventually Abel moved back to Strasbourg where he worked more with Oswald Schmiedeberg among others 7 Schmeidberg however sparked his interest in pharmacological research Lastly he worked in a biochemical laboratory in Berne where he met one Arthur Robertson Cushny who eventually worked with him at Michigan 7 Career editFinishing his time in Europe Abel returned to the University of Michigan as the chair of Materia Medica and Therapeutics There he played an important role in developing the first pharmacology department in North America 9 He only was at the University of Michigan until 1893 when William Osler of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine asked Abel to come to the school and accept a Professorship of Pharmacology 3 At Johns Hopkins Abel was the chair of pharmacology and biological chemistry until the departments split in 1908 when Abel became the chair solely of the Department of Pharmacology 7 At Johns Hopkins Abel performed his most groundbreaking research and held the position of chair of the department until he retired at the age of 75 in 1932 3 Isolation of epinephrine edit Ever since his early years in Europe Abel showed great interest in isolating pure form of internal gland hormones The first work that led to his international reputation as a pharmacologist and biochemist was the isolation of epinephrine from adrenal medulla However he was only able to isolate a monobenzoyl derivative of epinephrine While he was improving his processes on decomposing the benzoyl derivative to obtain salts of epinephrine using saponification a Japanese chemist J Takamine who had visited his lab was able to successfully isolate the neutral base of epinephrine by adding ammonium to highly concentrated extract a method Abel himself tried but failed due to the use of low concentration of extract 10 After Takamine s success Abel himself remarked with great candor The efforts of years on my part in this once mysterious field of suprarenal medullary biochemistry marred by blunders as they were eventuated then in the isolation of the hormone not in the form of the free base but in that of its monobenzoyl derivative 10 Devising early form of dialysis machine edit Together with L G Rowntree and B B Turner Abel devised what they called a vividiffusion apparatus consisting of a series of tubes surrounded by fluid They first demonstrated the apparatus at the Physiological Congress in Groningen in 1914 10 By allowing arterial blood to enter at one end of the connection and later return to circulation through the venous connection after dialysis they were able to demonstrate the existence of free amino acids in blood By isolating these amino acids from blood circulation Abel conducted various subsequent researches on the structure of proteins in the blood Not only did Abel use the apparatus for his research work he also realized the great clinical potential such dialysis machine would have on managing the damaging effects of renal failure 11 The vividiffusion apparatus Abel devised is the precursor to the modern day dialysis machine He summarized his work in a paper published in 1913 On the Removal of Diffusable Substances from the Circulating Blood by Means of Dialysis by Transfusion Science 12 Crystallization of insulin edit nbsp Insulin crystals Abel s work on insulin started with an invitation from his old friend Arthur A Noyes at California Institute of Technology Noyes had just received a grant from the Carnegie Corporation for research on insulin and he thought that Abel would be the right person to lead that research After some preliminary experiments on the subject Abel decided to take on the research and replied to his friend Will attack insulin Writing J J Abel 13 Abel invested the next few years on purifying insulin While he was trying various means to purify insulin he had the idea to measure sulfur content of his extracts and found that the higher the sulfur content the greater the activity The discovery not only significantly precipitated progress on extracting active fractions but also offered the very first concrete information on the structure of insulin sulfur is an integral part of insulin molecules 13 Continuing with his research on extracting insulin in November 1925 Abel finally was able to witness one of the most beautiful sights of his life glistening crystals of insulin forming on the sides of a test tube 13 While at the California Institute of Technology Abel completed an article in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences entitled Crystalline Insulin in 1926 14 Although Abel s work received great compliments from the media and the science community some doubted the purity of his crystals as preliminary tests revealed that they were in fact proteins 13 The test result was contrary to the dominant view at the time on proteins proteins were considered as unlikely to have such highly specific physiological activity shown by a hormone such as insulin 13 In 1927 he was published in the journal Science for this work with a paper entitled Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones 15 At the time Abel s laboratory was no doubt the center of insulin research in the United States A lot of young scientists came to his lab and worked under Abel to study the newly crystallized hormone Abel himself gradually withdrew from the actual experimental work on insulin after the first four years but he continued to guide the scientists in his lab to unravel more and more about the structure of insulin molecule 13 Founding scientific journals edit Despite his great dedication to experimentation work Abel s historical significance is certainly not restricted to his research work He was also the founder of a number of influential scientific journals As more and more research was conducted in the field of biochemistry Abel realized the importance of having a platform that allowed scientists all around the world to publish their work and report on their findings He therefore asked his friend Dr C A Herter Professor of Pharmacology at Columbia University for help on founding a scientific journal on biochemistry Together as joint editors Abel and Herter established the Journal of Biological Chemistry The first issue of the journal appeared in 1905 10 Motivated by the very same goal of trying to create an outlet for a wide dissemination of new scientific findings he later founded the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics in 1908 10 Publications edit Abel JJ Rowntree LG Turner BB Plasma removal with return of corpuscles plasmaphaeresis The Journal of Pharmacology and experimental therapeutics Vol V No 6 July 1914 Transfusion Science 11 166 77 16 Abel JJ Rowntree LG Turner BB On the removal of diffusable substances from the circulating blood by means of dialysis Transactions of the Association of American Physicians 1913 Transfusion Science 11 164 5 12 Abel JJ Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones Science 1927 Science 66 337 346 15 Abel JJ Arthur Robertson Cushny And Pharmacology Science 1926 Science 63 507 515 17 Abel JJ Crystalline Insulin 1926 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 12 2 132 136 14 Abel JJ Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for more Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator Science 1915 Science 42 135 147 18 Abel JJ Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for more Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator II Science 1915 Science 42 165 178 19 Degrees awards honors editDegrees edit Ph B Bachelor of Philosophy from University of Michigan 1883 M D Doctor of Medicine from University of Strassburg 1888 Honorary degrees edit M A Master of Arts from University of Michigan 1903 Sc D Doctor of Science from University of Michigan 1912 Sc D Doctor of Science from University of Pittsburgh 1915 LL D Doctor of Law from University of Cambridge 1920 Sc D Doctor of Science from Harvard University 1925 Sc D Doctor of Science from Yale University 1927 M D Doctor of Medicine from University of Lviv Poland 1927 LL D Doctor of Law from University of Aberdeen 1932 7 Awards edit Research Corporation Prize 1925 Lectureship of Kober Foundation 1925 Willard Gibbs Gold Medal by the Chicago Section of the American Chemical Society 1927 Gold Medal Society of Apothecaries London 1928 Conne Medal New York Chemists Club 1932 Kober Medal 1934 7 Honors edit Elected Member of the United States National Academy of Sciences 1912 20 Elected Member of the American Philosophical Society 1857 21 Private life editAbel married Mary Hinman in 1883 They met while he was a principal and she was a school teacher in La Porte Indiana 7 They had three children one of whom was a daughter who died as an infant in 1888 in Strasbourg The other two George H Abel and Robert Abel of Philadelphia and Boston respectively survived into adulthood Mary Abel and John Abel both passed in 1938 Mary in January and John in May due to a coronary thrombosis 7 References edit Dale H H 1939 John Jacob Abel 1857 1938 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 2 7 577 585 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1939 0019 a b c Abel John Jacob Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography 2008 Retrieved 2017 05 10 a b c d The John Jacob Abel Collection Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives Archived from the original on 2017 05 10 Retrieved 2017 05 10 Abel John Jacob Who Was Who Among North American Authors 1921 1939 Detroit Gale Research Co 1976 p 5 ISBN 978 0 8103 1041 4 John Jacob Abel AMERICAN PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMIST Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2017 05 10 Voegtlin Carl 1939 12 01 John Jacob Abel 1857 1938 Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 67 4 373 406 ISSN 0022 3565 a b c d e f g h i MacNider WM deB 1946 Biographical Memoir of John Jacob Abel National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Biographical Memoirs pp 231 238 Fye Bruce W 1993 Profiles in Cardiology H Newell Martin pp 631 632 About Us University of Michigan Ann Arbor medicine umich edu 2 October 2014 Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b c d e Macnider WM National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir of John Jacob Abel The National Academies Press pp 11 16 17 Abel John Jacob Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography Encyclopedia com a b Abel J J Rowntree L G Turner B B 1990 01 01 On the removal of diffusable substances from the circulating blood by means of dialysis Transactions of the Association of American Physicians 1913 Transfusion Science 11 2 164 165 ISSN 0955 3886 PMID 10160880 a b c d e f Jane H Murnaghan Paul Talalay John Jacob Abel and the Crystallization of Insulin Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Volume 10 Number 3 pp 340 343 345 346 368 369 Johns Hopkins University Press a b Abel John J 2017 05 02 Crystalline Insulin Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 12 2 132 136 doi 10 1073 pnas 12 2 132 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 1084434 PMID 16587069 a b Abel John Jacob 14 October 1927 Chemistry in Relation to Biology and Medicine with Especial Reference to Insulin and Other Hormones Science 66 1711 337 346 Bibcode 1927Sci 66 337A doi 10 1126 science 66 1711 337 PMID 17834012 Abel J J Rowntree L G Turner B B 1990 01 01 Plasma removal with return of corpuscles plasmaphaeresis The Journal of Pharmacology and experimental therapeutics Vol V No 6 July 1914 Transfusion Science 11 2 166 177 ISSN 0955 3886 PMID 10160881 Abel J J 1926 05 21 Arthur Robertson Cushny and Pharmacology Science 63 1638 507 515 Bibcode 1926Sci 63 507A doi 10 1126 science 63 1638 507 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17739266 Abel J J 1915 07 30 Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for More Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator Science 42 1074 135 147 Bibcode 1915Sci 42 135A doi 10 1126 science 42 1074 135 hdl 2027 hvd 32044106206626 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17797940 Abel J J 1915 08 06 Experimental and Chemical Studies of the Blood with an Appeal for More Extended Chemical Training for the Biological and Medical Investigator Ii Science 42 1075 165 178 Bibcode 1915Sci 42 165A doi 10 1126 science 42 1075 165 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17758865 John J Abel www nasonline org Retrieved 2023 10 31 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2023 10 31 External links edit nbsp Media related to John Jacob Abel at Wikimedia Commons National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Jacob Abel amp oldid 1182827230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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