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  1. Apr 15, 2024 · Awards And Honors: Nobel Prize. Subjects Of Study: cellular respiration. Otto Warburg (born October 8, 1883, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany—died August 1, 1970, West Berlin, West Germany) was a German biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1931 for his research on cellular respiration.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Scientific work and Nobel Prize. Otto H. Warburg, 1931. While working at the Marine Biological Station, Warburg performed research on oxygen consumption in sea urchin eggs after fertilization and showed that upon fertilization the rate of respiration increases as much as sixfold.

  3. Nov 21, 2023 · 56 Altmetric. Metrics. In 1923, Otto Warburg published his landmark study, in which he described his seminal observations related to metabolic shifts in cancer, often referred to as the...

    • Craig B. Thompson
  4. Institute for Cell Physiology in 1931. In the same year, he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on the metabolism of tumours and cell respiration. As Apple explains, “A cell turning to fermentation when oxygen is available is known as aerobic glycolysis or . the Warburg effect” and is estimated to occur in 70% of cancers.

  5. Dec 1, 2022 · However, it was not until around 1940 that Otto Meyerhof and others had established the full pathway of what we now call glycolysis. Therefore, at the time of Warburgs study of cancer metabolism in the 1920s, glycolysis was essentially a black box where glucose fed in at one end and lactate emerged at the other.

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  7. Facts. Photo from the Nobel Foundation archive. Otto Heinrich Warburg. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1931. Born: 8 October 1883, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. Died: 1 August 1970, West Berlin, West Germany (now Germany)

  8. Mar 8, 2016 · The legacy of Otto Warburg is not only the Warburg effect, but also the identification of the “respiratory ferment” and hydrogen-transferring cofactors and the isolation of glycolytic enzymes.

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