Luria, Salvador

Luria, Salvador

▪ Italian-American biologist
in full  Salvador Edward Luria 
born Aug. 13, 1912, Turin, Italy
died Feb. 6, 1991, Lexington, Mass., U.S.

      Italian-born American biologist who (with Max Delbrück (Delbrück, Max) and Alfred Day Hershey (Hershey, A.D.)) won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1969 for research on bacteriophages (bacteriophage), viruses that infect bacteria.

      Luria graduated from the University of Turin in 1935 and became a radiology specialist. He fled Italy for France in 1938 and went to the United States in 1940 after learning the techniques of phage research at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. Soon after his arrival, he met Delbrück, through whom he became involved with the American Phage Group, an informal scientific organization devoted to solving the problems of viral self-replication. Working with a member of the group in 1942, Luria obtained one of the electron micrographs of phage particles, which confirmed earlier descriptions of them as consisting of a round head and a thin tail.

      In 1943 Luria and Delbrück published a paper showing that, contrary to the current view, viruses undergo permanent changes in their hereditary material. That same year he and Delbrück devised the fluctuation test, which provided experimental evidence that phage-resistant bacteria were the result of spontaneous mutations rather than a direct response to changes in the environment. In 1945 Hershey and Luria demonstrated the existence not only of such bacterial mutants (mutation) but also of spontaneous phage mutants.

      Luria became Sedgwick professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1964. In 1974 he became director of the Center for Cancer Research at MIT. He was an author of a college textbook, General Virology (1953), and a popular text for the general reader, Life: The Unfinished Experiment (1973).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • LURIA, SALVADOR EDWARD — (1912–1991), U.S. biologist and Nobel Prize winner. Born in Turin, Luria studied medicine at the university there working under giuseppe levi , and from 1938 to 1940 did research at the Institute of Radium in Paris. After the fall of France in… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Luria , Salvador Edward — (1912–1991) Italian–American biologist Having studied medicine in his native city of Turin, physics and radiology in Rome, and bacteriophage research techniques in Paris, Luria emigrated to America in 1940. There he met Max Delbrück and became… …   Scientists

  • Luria, Salvador Edward — (b. 1912)    US biologist and Nobel laureate, 1969. Italian born Luria was a doctor and biologist in France before escaping to the United States in 1940. He became professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1964). In 1969… …   Who’s Who in Jewish History after the period of the Old Testament

  • Luria,Salvador Edward — Lu·ri·a (lo͝orʹē ə), Salvador Edward. 1912 1991. Italian born American biologist. He shared a 1969 Nobel Prize for investigating the mechanism of viral infection in living cells. * * * …   Universalium

  • Luria, Salvador (Edward) — born Aug. 13, 1912, Turin, Italy died Feb. 6, 1991, Lexington, Mass., U.S. Italian born U.S. biologist. He fled Italy for France in 1938, arriving in the U.S. in 1940. In 1942 he obtained an electron micrograph of phage particles that confirmed… …   Universalium

  • Luria, Salvador (Edward) — (13 ago. 1912, Turín, Italia–6 feb. 1991, Lexington, Mass., EE.UU.). Biólogo estadounidense nacido en Italia. Huyó de su país natal a Francia en 1938 y llegó a EE.UU. en 1940. En 1942 obtuvo una microfotografía electrónica de partículas de fagos …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Salvador E. Luria — Salvador Luria Salvador Luria Salvador Luria au MIT en 1969 Naissance 13 août 1912 Turin ( …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Salvador E. Luria — Salvador Edward Luria (* 13. August 1912 in Turin; † 6. Februar 1991 in Lexington, Massachusetts) war ein US amerikanischer Mikrobiologe italienischer Abstammung. Luria entwickelt 1943 den ersten Test, um Mutationen in Bakterien zu quantifizieren …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Salvador Luria — Salvador Edward Luria (* 13. August 1912 in Turin; † 6. Februar 1991 in Lexington, Massachusetts) war ein US amerikanischer Mikrobiologe italienischer Abstammung. Luria entwickelt 1943 den ersten Test, um Mutationen in Bakterien zu quantifizieren …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • LURIA (S.) — LURIA SALVADOR (1912 1991) Bactériologiste et généticien américain, d’origine italienne. Docteur en médecine en 1935, Luria complète sa formation par des études de mathématiques et de physique. Il s’intéresse ensuite à la radiographie des… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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