Kurt Wüthrich (born October 4, 1938)
is a Swiss chemist and Nobel laureate.
Born in Aarberg, Switzerland, Wüthrich was educated in chemistry, physics, and
mathematics at the University of Berne before pursuing his Ph.D. under the
direction of Silvio Fallab at the University of Basel, awarded in 1964. He
continued post-doctoral work with Fallab for a short time before leaving to work
at the University of California, Berkeley from 1965 to 1967 with Robert E.
Connick. That was followed by a stint working with Robert G. Shulman at the Bell
Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey (1967-1969).
Wüthrich returned to Switzerland, to Zurich, in 1969, where he began his career
there at the ETH Zurich, rising to Professor of Biophysics by 1980. He currently
maintains a laboratory there, although his appointment is at The Scripps
Research Institute, in La Jolla, California.
He was awarded part of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2002 for his leadership
of ongoing work, begun in the 1970s, on the use of multidimensional nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study the structure of proteins.
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