(Carl Peter)
Henrik Dam was born in Copenhagen on 21st February 1895, to
Emil Dam, apothecary, and his wife Emilie (née Peterson), a
teacher.
The young man graduated in chemistry from the Polytechnic
Institute, Copenhagen in 1920, and the same year was appointed
instructor (assistant) in chemistry at the School of Agriculture
and Veterinary Medicine, progressing to instructor in
biochemistry at the Physiological Laboratory of the University of
Copenhagen, 1923. The following year saw his marriage, to
Inger, née Olsen.
In 1925 Dam studied microchemistry in Graz (Austria) with
F. Pregl. He
became Assistant Professor at the Institute of Biochemistry,
Copenhagen University, in 1928, and was promoted to Associate
Professor at the same place in 1929, continuing to hold this post
although he was working abroad part of the time, till 1941. On
submitting a thesis Nogle Undersøgelser over Sterinernes
Biologiske Betydning (Some investigations on the biological
significance of the sterines) to the University of Copenhagen in
1934, Dam was awarded Ph.D. in Biochemistry.
To further his studies of the metabolism of sterols, Dam obtained
a Rockefeller Fellowship and worked in Rudolph Schoenheimer's
Laboratory in Freiburg, Germany, during 1932-1933, and later
worked with P.
Karrer, of Zurich, in 1935. He discovered vitamin K while
studying the sterol metabolism of chicks in Copenhagen. He
studied this vitamin further with respect to its occurrence and
biological function in animals and plants, as well as its
application in human medicine, its fundamental chemical and
physical properties and its purification and isolation - the
latter part of this research being carried out in collaboration
with P. Karrer. From the study of vitamin K arose the observation
of some new symptoms in experimental animals, such as increased
capillary permeability and colouration of adipose tissue, which
turned out to be due to the ingestion of certain fats in the
absence of vitamin E.
He was on a lecture tour of Canada and the United States under
the auspices of the American Scandinavian Foundation in 1940-1941, this
tour having been planned before the occupation of Denmark by
German troops in April, 1940. He was able to carry out research
in Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratories during the summer
and autumn of 1941, and at the University of
Rochester, N.Y., between 1942-1945 as a Senior Research
Associate - it was during this period that he was awarded the
1943 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine - and at the Rockefeller
Institute for Medical Research in 1945 as an Associate
Member.
During his absence, Dam was appointed Professor of Biochemistry
at the Polytechnic Institute, Copenhagen, in 1941, though the
designation of his Chair at the Polytechnic Institute was changed
to Professor of Biochemistry and Nutrition in 1950.
After his return to Denmark in 1946, Dam's main research subjects
were vitamin K, vitamin E, fats, cholesterol, and, in recent
years, nutritional studies in relation to gall-stone formation.
He has been leader of the Biochemical Division of the Danish Fat
Research Institute from 1956 to 1962.
He has published or has collaborated in the publication of about
315 articles on biochemical problems, mainly concerning the
biochemistry of sterols, vitamins K and E, and fats.
Professor Dam is a member of the Danish Academy of Technical
Sciences (1947); the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters
(1948); he was Correspondant Étranger, Académie Royale
de Médecine de Belgique (1951); elected Hon. Fellow of the
Royal
Society, Edinburgh (1953); became Joint Honorary President,
International Union of Nutritional Sciences in 1954, and was
Corresponding Member of the German Association for Nutrition in
1961, following on the award of the Norman Medal by the German
Association for Fat Research the previous year.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Henrik Dam died on April 17, 1976.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1943