Hans Adolf Krebs - vertaling naar frans
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Hans Adolf Krebs - vertaling naar frans

BRITISH BIOCHEMIST (1900-1981)
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs; Sir Hans Krebs; Hans A. Krebs; The Creator of the Krebs Cycle; Hans Adolf Krebs
  • Krebs with his wife in Stockholm in 1953
  • Krebs with [[Clementine Churchill]] and [[Frits Zernike]] in Stockholm in 1953

Hans Adolf Krebs         
Hans Adolf Krebs (1900-1981), German-born English biochemist after whom the Krebs cycle was named, winner of the 1953 Nobel Prize
Krebs         
Krebs, family name; Hans Adolf Krebs (1900-81), German-born English biochemist, winner of the Nobel prize

Definitie

Hitler
¦ noun an authoritarian or tyrannical person.
Derivatives
Hitlerian adjective
Hitlerism noun
Hitlerite noun & adjective
Origin
from Adolf Hitler (1889-1945), Austrian-born Nazi leader, Chancellor of Germany 1933-45.

Wikipedia

Hans Krebs (biochemist)

Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, FRS (, German: [hans ˈʔaːdɔlf ˈkʁeːps] (listen); 25 August 1900 – 22 November 1981) was a German-born British biologist, physician and biochemist. He was a pioneer scientist in the study of cellular respiration, a biochemical process in living cells that extracts energy from food and oxygen and makes it available to drive the processes of life. He is best known for his discoveries of two important sequences of chemical reactions that take place in the cells of nearly all organisms, including humans, other than anaerobic microorganisms, namely the citric acid cycle and the urea cycle. The former, often eponymously known as the "Krebs cycle", is the sequence of metabolic reactions that allows cells of oxygen-respiring organisms to obtain far more ATP from the food they consume than anaerobic processes such as glycolysis can supply; and its discovery earned Krebs a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1953. With Hans Kornberg, he also discovered the glyoxylate cycle, a slight variation of the citric acid cycle found in plants, bacteria, protists, and fungi.

Krebs died in 1981 in Oxford, where he had spent 13 years of his career from 1954 until his retirement in 1967 at the University of Oxford.