K. Barry Sharpless, 1959 Alumnus of Friends' Central School, Wins Second Nobel Prize
WYNNEWOOD, Pa., Oct. 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Only five scientists in history have won a Nobel prize twice, and among those five is K. Barry Sharpless, a Class of 1959 alumnus of Friends' Central School in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania. This incredible honor puts Sharpless in the company of Marie Curie.
On October 5, the 2022 Nobel prize in chemistry was awarded to scientists K. Barry Sharpless, Carolyn Bertozzi, at Stanford University, and Morten Meldal, at the University of Copenhagen. The three were recognized for devising a method to "click" molecules together that has been described as working like "molecular Lego."
A longtime faculty member at Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, Sharpless himself coined the term "click chemistry" to "describe reactions that are fast, high-yielding, and clean, meaning that they do not produce a lot of unwanted side-products," explained Dr. Phillip Broadwith, in the Royal Society of Chemistry's magazine Chemistry World. "One of the first 'click reactions,' the copper catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition, was discovered independently by Sharpless and Meldal and had sprouted its own branch of synthetic chemistry," he added. Catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition is now a widely used method to make drugs and map DNA.
K. Barry Sharpless won his first Nobel prize in chemistry in 2001 for his work on catalyzed oxidation reactions, another type of chemical reaction used to produce drugs.
Sharpless's father, a birthright Quaker, sent him to Friends' Central School in seventh grade. A shy student who was passionate about his work, Sharpless was known to make up excuses for social occasions in order to spend time in the lab. It was clear from his yearbook quote – where he is described as a "science whiz" – that his passion for science began early. He was also enthusiastic about learning German while at Friends' Central, and Sharpless developed a proficiency that was enhanced by his contact with the exchange students from the Hans Hubert Gymnasium in Gräefelfing near Munich. The Sharpless family hosted one of the students.
In his junior year at Friends' Central, Sharpless grew 12 inches and was recruited for the football team when the coach spotted him beating some of the top players in arm wrestling.
In an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer, Tim Patterson '59, who played on the undefeated football team along with Sharpless, described him as, "just a regular guy. He didn't push anything in front of you saying he was brighter than the rest of us."
Another passion for Sharpless in his school days was fishing. He spent the summers exploring the banks of the Manasquan River, later learning to sail with his uncle and catching fish. He contemplated marine biology before deciding on chemistry as his career focus.
After graduating from Friends' Central in 1959, Sharpless attended Dartmouth College, and he went on to receive a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Stanford University. He has taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard, and, in 1990, he joined the faculty of Scripps Research Institute, where he is the W.M. Keck Professor of Chemistry.
Along with two Nobel prizes, Sharpless has been widely recognized for his scientific achievements over many decades, being elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1985 and receiving, among myriad accolades, the King Faisal International Prize for Science and the 2019 Priestley Medal, the American Chemical Society's highest honor.
SOURCE Friends' Central School
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