Awards & Winners

Robert W. Holley

Date of Birth 28-January-1922
Place of Birth Urbana
(Champaign County, Illinois, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Robert William Holley
Profession Chemist
Robert William Holley was an American biochemist. He shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1968 for describing the structure of alanine transfer RNA, linking DNA and protein synthesis. Holley was born in Urbana, Illinois, and graduated from Urbana High School in 1938. He went on to study chemistry at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, graduating in 1942 and commencing his PhD studies in organic chemistry at Cornell University. During World War II Holley spent two years working under Professor Vincent du Vigneaud at Cornell University Medical College, where he was involved in the first chemical synthesis of penicillin. Holley completed his PhD studies in 1947.*USDA ARS. Following his graduate studies Holley remained associated with Cornell. He became an Assistant Professor of organic chemistry in 1948, and was appointed as Professor of Biochemistry in 1962. He began his research on RNA after spending a year's sabbatical studying with James F. Bonner at the California Institute of Technology. Holley's research on RNA focused first on isolating transfer RNA, and later on determining the sequence and structure of alanine tRNA, the molecule that incorporates the amino acid alanine into proteins. Holley's team of researchers determined the tRNA's structure by using two ribonucleases to split the tRNA molecule into pieces. Each enzyme split the molecule at location points for specific nucleotides. By a process of "puzzling out" the structure of the pieces split by the two different enzymes, then comparing the pieces from both enzyme splits, the team eventually determined the entire structure of the molecule.

Awards by Robert W. Holley

Check all the awards nominated and won by Robert W. Holley.

1968


Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
(for their interpretation of the genetic code and its function in protein synthesis)

1967


NAS Award in Molecular Biology
(For his elucidation of the full sequence of nucleotides in the molecule of a soluble RNA.)

1965


Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
(For determining for the first time the chemical structure of an amino acid transfer RNA.)