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10 Facts About Gordon Hammes

1.

Gordon Hammes conducted postdoctoral research with Manfred Eigen at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Gottingen, Germany.

2.

Gordon Hammes then secured a faculty position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before moving to Cornell University in 1965, where he was professor and chair of the department of chemistry.

3.

Gordon Hammes spent some time at the University of California, Santa Barbara as vice-chancellor for academic affairs, and then joined the biochemistry faculty at Duke University in 1991.

4.

Gordon Hammes served as vice chancellor of academic affairs at the Duke University Medical Center from 1991 through 1998.

5.

Gordon Hammes was editor-in-chief of the American Chemical Society journal Biochemistry from 1992 until 2003, and president of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology starting in 1994.

6.

Dr Gordon Hammes is a world leader in the field of enzyme mechanisms and regulation, starting with work with Eigen on the temperature-jump technique and with Robert Alberty on relaxation spectra.

7.

Gordon Hammes studied the kinetic behavior of various enzymes, including glutamate-aspartate transaminase, hexokinase, and ribonuclease.

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Manfred Eigen Max Planck
8.

Gordon Hammes developed new methodologies that allowed a better understanding of enzyme catalysis, including fast reaction techniques, fluorescence spectroscopy, and single molecule microscopy.

9.

Gordon Hammes was one of the first to develop fluorescence energy transfer as a technology to study distances between and within proteins.

10.

Gordon Hammes's work revolutionized the understanding of conformational changes and multiple intermediates in enzyme catalysis.