Torbjörn Caspersson
Torbjörn Oskar Caspersson was a Swedish cytologist and geneticist. He was born in Motala and attended the Stockholm University, where he studied medicine and biophysics.
Contributions
Caspersson made several key contributions to biology.- He provided William Astbury with well prepared samples of DNA for Astbury's pioneering structural measurements.
- In 1936, in his doctoral thesis in chemistry, presented at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, he first studied genetic material inside a cell with an ultraviolet microscope to determine the nucleic acid content of cellular structures such as the nucleus and nucleolus using the Feulgen reaction to stain the DNA.
- He worked with Jack Schultz in Stockholm from 1937 to 1939 on protein synthesis in cells and published the work in 1939, where he independent of Jean Brachet, working out the same problem using a different technique, found that cells making proteins are rich in ribonucleic acids RNA, implying that RNA is required to make proteins. This was summarised in his book 'Cell Growth and Cell Function'.
- He received a personal professorship from the Swedish state in 1944.
- He became head of the newly created department for cell research and genetics at the Medical Nobel Institute, at the Karolinska, in 1945.
- He was the first to study the giant chromosomes found in insect larvae.
- He studied the role of the nucleolus in protein synthesis.
- He examined the relationship between the quantity of heterochromatin and the rate of growth of cancer cells.
- In 1969 when working at the Karolinska Institute, he found that a stain caused chromosomes to show light and dark lateral bands along their length. This banding method permits the accurate identification of all 22 autosomes and the X and Y chromosomes. This technique highlighted slight structural abnormalities and specific identification of the extra chromosomes involved in conditions such as Down's syndrome.
In 1979 Caspersson was awarded the Balzan Prize for Biology "For his fundamental studies on protein metabolism and nucleic acids, culminating in a method for identifying specific bands on individual chromosomes by ultraviolet microscopy, thereby creating a new tool for the study of evolution". He was a member of both the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.