Activity | Education: 1926-1928 Albani Volksschule, Goettingen 1929-1933 Oberrealschule, Goettingen 1933-1936 The Perse School, Cambridge 1936-1938 The Edinburgh Academy, Edinburgh 1938-1943 Medical Student, Edinburgh University 1947-1948 Advanced biochemistry course, University College, London Career: January 1943-June 1943: House Office, Western General, Edinburgh September 1943-August 1947: Military Service, Medical Officer, Royal Army Medical Corps on active service in the Far East until September 1946 1947 Research Student, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford 1948-1951 Medical Research Council Studentship, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford 1951-1953 Research Office, Toxicology Unit, Medical Research Council, Carshalton, Surrey 1953-1960 Senior Research Officer, Nuffield Institute for Medical Research, University of Oxford and Departmental Demonstrator, Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford 1960-1973 Vandervell Professor of Pharmacology, Royal College of Surgeons, London 1964-1973 Honorary Director of the Thrombosis Research Group, Medical Research Council 1973-1978 Sheild Professor of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge and Professorial Fellow, Gonville and Caius College 1978-1986 Professor of Pharmacology, Kings College, London retiring as Emeritus Professor of London University 1988-present Director then Research Professor, William Harvey Research Institute, St Bartholomew's Hospital School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London Honours and Awards: D Sc (Hon) of the Universities of Bordeaux (1979); Paris (1987); Loyola Chicago (1995); Queen Mary London (2006) M D (Hon) of the Universities of Muenster (1980); Leuven (1981); Edinburgh (1982); Brown University Providence Rhode Island (1967); Munich (1989); Dusseldorf (2001) Fellowships: Royal College of Physicians (1979); Kings College London (1988) Honorary Fellow of St Peter's College Oxford (1979); Royal College of Surgeons of England (2002); British Pharmacological Society (2008) Memberships: Akademie Leopoldina (1971); Hon Life member of the New York Academy of Science (1981); International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (1980); Hon Member of the British Atherosclerosis Society (2001); Corresponding member of the Belgian Royal Academy of Medicine (1982); The Rheinish-Westfaelische Akademie, Dusseldorf (1982); The German Pharmacological and Physiological Societies (1992); Societe de Biologie (1993) Medals: Albrecht-von-Haller medal, University of Goettingen (1979); Ratschow Memorial Medal, International Angiology Curatorium (1980); Auenbrugger Medal, University of Graz (1984); Fahreus Medal (2000); Gold Medal for Medicine, Ernst Jung Foundation, Hamburg (2001) Prizes and awards: Paul Morawitz Prize (1980); Robert Pfleger Prize (1990); Alexander-von-Humboldt Award (1994); International Aspirin Award (1995) Other Honours: Chevalier de l'Ordre National du Merite, France (1979); Professor de Fondation de France, Paris (1982-1984); President of the VIIth International Congress on Thombosis and Haemostasis (1979); President of the International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (1980-1981); Foundation President (1980-1981) and honorary life membership (2000) of the British Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Establishment of the Max-and-Gustav-Born Educational Foundation, Muenster and Recklinghausen (2007) Named lectureships: Beyer Lectures, University of Wisconsin (1969); Sharpey-Schafer Lecture, University of Edinburgh (1973); Cross Memorial Lecture, Royal College of Surgeons of England (1973); Wander Memorial Lecture, University of Bern (1974); Johnson Memorial Lecture, Paris (1975); William Creasy Memorial Lecture, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island (1977); Lo Yuk Tong Foundation Lecture, University of Hong Kong (1978); Heineman Memorial Lecture, Charlotte, North Carolina (1978); Carlo Erba Foundation Lecture, Milan (1979); Sir Henry Dale Lecture, London (1981); Rokitansky Memorial Lecture, Vienna (1984); Annual Oration of the Medical Society of London (1981); International Society and Federation of Cardiology Lecture at the European Congress of Cardiology, Dusseldorf (1984); Paul Martini Lecture, Bonn (1985); Academy Lecture, University of Perugia (1986); Millenium Symposium Lecture. 'Medical Developments in the UK', Berlin (2000); Symposium Lecture, 'The Born Family in Goettingen and Beyond', Goettingen (2000)
Gustav Victor Rudolf Born was born on 29 July 1921 in Goettingen, Germany, the third child of Hedwig (Hedi) Ehrenberg and Max Born. His Father was made FRS in 1939 and awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1954. Gustav went to school in Goettingen and had an unusual childhood meeting with great physicists associated with his father visiting their home and his mother was associated with literary activites, writing plays and poems and corresponding with writers and philosophers. When the Nazi government came to power in January 1933, his family left Germany and his father accepted an invitation to work in Cambridge and then in Edinburgh. He attended the Perse School Cambridge from 1933-1936 and then Edinburgh Academy from 1936-1938. He studied medicine at Edinburgh University from 1938 and graduated in 1943 aged 22 after only 4 ½ years and no vacations as the medical school was under pressure to increase production of doctors for the armed forces. He had become a naturalised British subject in 1938 and so was liable for military service, as a medical officer in the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC), on active service in the Far East until September 1946. In December 1945 he was a pathologist with the British occupation force in Japan, stationed at the Army Base Hospital in Hiro on the inland sea, four miles from Hiroshima. His patients included large numbers of Japanese civilian casualties of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on 6th August 1945 and deaths caused from haemorrhages caused by radiation-induced thrombocytopenia first aroused his interest in blood platelets. On demobilisation in the autumn of 1947, He wrote to Professor Sir Howard W Florey FRS at the Sir William Dunn School of pathology in Oxford who accepted him as a research student. In 1948 was awarded a Medical Research Council studentship for training in research methods, participating in the schools post-penicillin interest in anti-bacterial agents. He graduated D.Phil. Oxon with thesis entitled 'Bacteriolytic enzymes of moulds' in 1951 but was unable to publish his work as similar results were published by a Belgian group before his thesis was finished. During his studies, he read widely to sustain his interest in medical science and became particularly interested in immunology to the limited extent that it was then understood. It occurred to him that diseases or infections might alter ones proteins in such a way that the immune system treats them as foreign and makes antibodies against them and spoke to his supervisor, who dismissed it and told him to get on with brewing moulds. He was too shy to speak to Professor Florey and so was deprived in about 1949 of a chance to develop an original idea which some time later turned out to be of great importance. At this time, he wanted to be finished with original research and become a clinical doctor but Professor Florey spoke to him and urged him not to lose confidence. He obtained for him a research position in the Medical Research Council (MRC) Toxicology Unit in Carshalton, Surrey, working on the mechanisms of pulmonary oedema in rabbits. In 1953 he was invited by Professor Geoffrey Dawes FRS to join his team at the Nuffield Institute for Medical Research at Oxford University working on the changes in foetal circulation at birth in sheep. He participated in important discoveries including the autonomic control of foetal circulation and the mechanism of the closure of the ductus arteriosus. During this period, he was departmental demonstrator at the Department of Pharmacology at Oxford University teaching in the innovative practical classes devised by Professor Edith Buelbring FRS and joining her in original work on the physiology and pharmacology of smooth muscle. He also worked with Professor Hugh Blaschko FRS on mechanisms of the cellular uptake,storage and release of biogenic amines in adrenal medulla and elsewhere and gave an annual lecture to medical students on metabolic effects of injury, now included in successive editions of General Pathology edited by H W Florey. From 1960-1973 Gustav was Vandell Professor of Pharmacology at the Royal College of Surgeons in London (in succession to Sir William Paton FRS). From 1964-1973 he was also Honorary Director of the Thrombosis Research Group of the Medical Research Council. This was a golden period in his research career working with his senior lecturer (and closest scientific friend) John Vane, later Professor and Nobel Laureate in 1982 for discovering the mode of action of aspirin and prostacyclin. Work topics during this time were: Continued elucidation of mechanisms of uptake, storage and release of amines in adrenal medullary cells (cateholamines) and in platelets (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) Pathophysiology of blood platelets: invention of optical aggregometry. Mechanism of platelet aggregation in haemostasis and thrombosis Discovery of aggregation cofactors. Elucidation of the aggregation release reaction (discovered by means of optical aggregometry) Mechanism of platelet aggregation in haemostasis and thrombosis Discovery of aggregation cofactors Elucidation of the aggregation release reaction (discovered by means of optical aggregometry by D C Macmillan and M F Oliver in 1965) Discovery of the first aggregation inhibitors Effects of drugs on platelet function Control of platelet thrombosis in artificial organs Determinants of bleeding time measurements Elucidation of the effects of fish diet/polyunsaturated fatty acids on haemostasis Aggregation abnormality in scurvy From 1973-1978, Sheild Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Cambridge and Professorial Fellow of Gonville and Caius College Work topics during this time were: Continuing elucidation of platelet aggregation ex vivo and in vivo Inhibition of platelet activation in the circulating blood by drug effects on red cells Quantitative investigation of the phenomenon of granulocyte rolling in blood vessels Inhibition of lymphocyte recirculation From 1978-1986, Professor of Pharmacology at Kings College London. He retired as Emeritus Professor of London University. His work topics during this time were: Determination of platelet activation time Quantitation of determinants of haemostasis Effects of psychoactive drugs on platelet 5-HT mechanisms Elucidation of the interactions of platelets and of granulocytes with vascular endothelium He also published on paper on inhibition of the uptake of purines and nucelotides by African trypanosomes, which nitiated extensive and continuing work on a novel approach to the discovery of drugs active against sleeping sickness From 1988-present, Director, then Research Professor at the William Harvey Research Institute, St Bartholomew's Hospital School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London Work topics during this time: Atherosclerosis research (based on the presumption that elucidation and prevention of atherogenesis and plaque fissure will diminish the clinical relevance of platelets in coronary and cerebral thrombosis) Determinants of the atherogenic uptake of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and fibrinogen by arterial walls Demonstration of increased LDL uptake by a catecholamine (noradrenaline) Elucidation of plaque rupture Putative explanation of anomalous aspirin and warfarin effects on heart attack survival Endothelial surface charge effects in the microcirculation
His sister Margaret(1915-2000) married Maurice Pryce FRS. His sister Irene (1914-2004) married Brinley Newton-John and had three children including the singer Olivia Newton-John. He married in Edinburgh in 1950 to Ann Plowden-Wardlaw. They had three children, Max (born 1951), Sebastian (born 1953) and Georgina (born 1955). The marriage was dissolved in 1960. He married a second time in London in 1962 to Faith Maurice-Williams. They had two children, Carey (born 1965) and Matthew (born 1968). He also has ten grandchildren
His ancestry is documented and summarised in 'The Born Family in Goettingen and beyond' written by himself and published by the Institute for the History of Science at Goettingen University in 2002. There is voluminous documentation by and about Max and Heidi Born, including their articles, books and enormous handwritten correspondence. Most of this information is collected in the Born Family Archive deposited in the Archive of Churchill College, Cambridge
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