Peter Alfred Gorer Explained

Peter Alfred Gorer
Birth Date:14 April 1907
Birth Place:London, England
Death Date:1961 (aged 54)
Fields:Immunology, Pathology, Genetics
Workplaces:Guy's Hospital, University College London, Lister Institute
Education:Charterhouse School, Guy's Hospital, University College London
Known For:Co-discovery of histocompatibility antigens and their genetic regulation
Awards:Fellow of the Royal Society (1960), Cancer Research Institute William B. Coley Award (1975)

Peter Alfred Gorer FRS[1] (14 April 1907 (London)–1961) was a British immunologist, pathologist and geneticist who pioneered the field of transplant immunology.

Peter Gorer was born in London to Edgar (drowned in the 1915 sinking of RMS Lusitania) and Rachel née Cohen Gorer.[1] He died of lung cancer in 1961.

Education and work institutions

He was educated at Charterhouse. He graduated from Guy's Hospital, London in 1929 and then studied genetics under J.B.S. Haldane at University College, London.[2] From 1933 to 1940 Gorer worked at the Lister Institute before returning to Guy's Hospital to work as a pathologist.

Research

Gorer is credited with the co-discovery of histocompatibility antigens and the elucidation of their genetic regulation. Together with George Snell, he helped discover the murine histocompatibility 2 locus, or H-2, which is analogous to the human leukocyte antigen.[3] [4] Gorer also identified antigen II and determined its role in transplant tissue rejection.[3] [4]

Awards

See also

Notes and References

  1. Medawar . P. B. . Peter Medawar. 10.1098/rsbm.1961.0008 . Peter Alfred Gorer. 1907-1961 . . 7 . 95–109. 1961 . 71157785 .
  2. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . 10.1093/ref:odnb/33475 . 2004 .
  3. Book: Cruse, J.M. . Illustrated Dictionary of Immunology . R.E. Lewis . 2002 . CRC Press . London . 0-8493-1935-8 . 259 .
  4. Book: Tauber, A.I. . The Generation of Diversity . S.H. Podolsky . 2000 . Harvard University Press . Cambridge, MA . 0-674-00182-6 . 32–33 .