Richard Martin Willstätter (August 13,
1872 – August 3, 1942) was a German chemist whose study of the structure of
chlorophyll and other plant pigments won him the 1915 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
He invented paper chromatography independently of Mikhail Tsvet.
Willstatter obtained his doctorate from the University of Munich (1894) for work
on the structure of cocaine. While serving as an assistant to Adolf von Baeyer
at Munich, he continued research into the structure of alkaloids and synthesized
several.
In 1905 he was given a professorship at the University of Zurich and began
working on chlorophyll. He elucidated its structure and showed that the blood
pigment heme bears a structural resemblance to the porphyrin compound found in
chlorophyll. He was professor of chemistry in the University of Berlin and
director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute at Berlin (1912-1916), where his
investigations revealed the structure of many of the pigments of flowers and
fruits. When his work was interrupted by the war, at the behest of Fritz Haber
he turned his attention to developing a gas mask.
In 1916 Willstatter succeeded Baeyer at Munich. During the 1920s he investigated
the mechanisms of enzyme reactions and did much to establish that enzymes are
chemical substances and not biological organisms. His view of enzymes as
nonprotein in nature was widely held until disproved in 1930. Being a Jew, in
1924 he resigned his post at Munich in protest against anti-Semitic pressures.
He continued his work privately, first in Munich and, from 1939, in Switzerland.
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