Introduction
Colon is born in Prague (at that time, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Today is a Czech Republic). In 2004, the Nike couple were awarded the national chemistry historical milestones to commemorate their major discovery.
Licheng
Gitty Coli is born in a Jewish family. She is accommodated by family education before entering a woman school. Her uncle is a professor of a pediatric, encouraging her to learn medicine. In 1914 she entered the University of Prague. At that time, there were only very few students in the university. She met Carl Corri in the university. They graduated from 1920 to marry. In 1922, they were immigrated to the United States in the New York State Buffalo National Disease Research Institute (this Rose Will Park Cancer Institute) continued their medical research. In 1928 they joined US nationality.
tells them in Rose Will to work together, but they continue to work together, and their main research objects are how the human body produces energy and how to transfer energy. Their major is biochemistry, they began to study glucose metabolism. During the Rose Wil, they published 50 papers together. They always put the names of the main workers' names to the forefront. Gree Colori published 11 papers alone. In 1929 they published the paper that made them won the Nobel Prize. Corri cycle explains how energy is transmitted from muscle to liver, then transferred to muscles.
They left Rosewell after publishing this paper. Some universities provide positions to Carl, but they are reluctant to provide positions for Gger. In 1931, they moved to St. Louis, Missouri. Carl became the chairman of the Pharmaceutical Department of the University of Saint Louis Washington University, although Guti's research achievements, but she only got an assistant researcher's position. In 1947, Cal became a professor when the Chairman of the Department of Biochemistry, she was at the end of 1957.
Reward and Honor
1947 Gri Coli becomes a third place to get a scientific Nobel Prize, and the first American woman who won the Nobel Prize. The riolis mountains on the moon are named after she is named. She and her husband Karl share a star on the St. Louis Star Street.
On March 6, 2008, the US Postal Authority issued a memorial stamp, but the molecular formula of the glucose-1-phosphoric acid on the stamp has a mistake, although this stamp is still released.