Athel Cornish-Bowden
Athel Cornish-Bowden is a British biochemist known for writing textbooks, particularly those on enzyme kinetics and his work on metabolic control analysis.
Education and career
Cornish-Bowden has worked on pepsin catalysis, and has researched enzyme catalysis, and in later years worked on the control of metabolism. More recently he has researched the origin and nature of life.He received a D.Phil. from Oxford with Jeremy R. Knowles, followed by post-doctoral work at Berkeley with Daniel E. Koshland Jr.
Research
Cornish-Bowden has authored over 200 peer-reviewed papers and nine textbooks on topics related to enzyme kinetics, mathematics and historical perspectives in science.Cornish-Bowden's research can be divided into three primary areas: Enzyme kinetics, metabolic control, done mainly in collaboration with Jannie Hofmeyr, and the origin of life. The following lists some of the topics and selected references to the work carried out and published by Cornish-Bowden:
- Mechanisms of Pepsin Catalysis
- Binding of ligands to Proteins
- Kinetics of nitrite reductase
- Kinetics of nitrate reductase
- The evolution of macromolecules
- Properties of multienzyme systems
- The theory of self-organizing systems
Research contributions
Cornish-Bowden introduced the direct-linear plot procedure for estimating enzyme parameters, and has performed work on hexokinase evolution and kinetics, and the control and regulation of metabolism.Editorial and related work
Cornish-Bowden has participated on the editorial boards of various journals, and has been active on International Committees. He was secretary of the IUPAC-IUBMB Joint Committee on Biochemical Nomenclatureand in that capacity convened the committee that prepared the current IUBMB recommendations on enzyme kinetics.
He also contributed to recommendations on biochemical thermodynamics, and to proposals for system representation of biochemical networks.