Norman Lowther Edson
Encyclopedia
Norman Edson PhD (Cantab) BMedSc (NZ) MB ChB (NZ) FRSNZ FNZIC, was the first Professor of Biochemistry (1949–1967) in the University of New Zealand based at the University of Otago
University of Otago
The University of Otago in Dunedin is New Zealand's oldest university with over 22,000 students enrolled during 2010.The university has New Zealand's highest average research quality and in New Zealand is second only to the University of Auckland in the number of A rated academic researchers it...

 Dunedin, New Zealand. Edson made contributions to knowledge of cellular intermediary metabolism; developed a system of education in the elements of biochemistry for students of medicine, dentistry, and home science; a programme for a training in biochemistry leading to BSc/MSc; supervised postgraduate students in biochemistry to PhD; and was the medical member of the enquiry on the fluoridation of the New Zealand public water supply.

Early Life

Edson was the only surviving child of Norman Percival Edson (1868–1908), a pharmacist, and Phoebe, née Moses, a photographic colourist. Following her husband's early death Phoebe Edson did not remarry but devoted herself to caring for her only child. Family money provided a comfortable home.
At Auckland Grammar School
Auckland Grammar School
Auckland Grammar School is a state secondary school for years 9 to 13 boys in Auckland, New Zealand. It had a roll of 2,483 in 2008, including a number of boarders who live in nearby Tibbs' House, making it one of the largest schools in New Zealand...

 Edson won a Junior National Scholarship (1921) and was in the top ten Scholars for New Zealand. He entered the University of Otago School of Medicine in 1922 and his mother moved to Dunedin to housekeep for him. In 1927 he graduated Bachelor of Medical Science (BMedSc), the first to do so. Edson had a distinguished undergraduate career gaining four prizes and graduated MB ChB with distinction. Edson excelled at hockey and represented his School, University, Province and New Zealand.

Postgraduate Education

After graduating Edson spent two years jointly in the Departments of Chemistry and of Physiology at Otago University and received a Certificate of Proficiency in Chemistry in 1932 with a thesis on catalysis of oxybenzoic acids. Also as Assistant Lecturer in Physiology he gave practical classes and lectured on Biochemistry. By then he had decided Biochemistry was his subject.
From this period Edson published two papers, both impressively well written and displaying careful, systematic experimental method.
In 1933 Edson won a Beit Memorial Medical Fellowship and spent two years at Cambridge University at the Sir William Dunn Institute of Biochemistry whose Director was Frederick Gowland Hopkins. Edson became Hans Adolf Krebs
Hans Adolf Krebs
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs was a German-born British physician and biochemist. Krebs is best known for his identification of two important metabolic cycles: the urea cycle and the citric acid cycle...

's first PhD student, a wonderfully stimulating and productive experience. Edson spent from the Easter term of 1934 to the Easter term of 1936 in Cambridge (Emmanuel College
Emmanuel College, Cambridge
Emmanuel College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge.The college was founded in 1584 by Sir Walter Mildmay on the site of a Dominican friary...

), two instead of the usual three years of the PhD, and the term of the Fellowship. His mother's ill-health required an early return to New Zealand. His thesis, Studies in Intermediary Metabolism, gained him his PhD in December 1936.
Krebs became a lifelong friend, a long-range source of scientific advice, a host for Edson's future postgraduate students and his own sabbatical in 1956. Krebs, in his reminiscences refers to Edson twice: "With Norman Edson, a medical graduate and PhD student from New Zealand, I studied the formation of ketone bodies in liver slices." And in the index to people in the book, "Edson, Norman Lowther (1904-1970). New Zealand biochemist, Otago. My collaborator in Cambridge."
Edson also befriended Luis Federico Leloir
Luis Federico Leloir
Luis Federico Leloir was an Argentine doctor and biochemist who received the 1970 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He was the first Spanish-speaking scientist to ever receive the award...

 and collaborated with him on keto-genesis. Edson dedicated his 1966 paper on glucogenesis from sorbitol to LeLoir to celebrate Leloir's 60th birthday. Edson also became acquainted with Ernst Chain, and D D Wood.
In 1935 Edson attended the 15th International Congress of Physiology at Moscow. He subsequently told of hearing Ivan Pavlov
Ivan Pavlov
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov was a famous Russian physiologist. Although he made significant contributions to psychology, he was not in fact a psychologist himself but was a mathematician and actually had strong distaste for the field....

speak and the destitution in the Moscow streets with the hungry placing their noses against the window looking at the plenty on the tables on the other side.

From Edson's Cambridge work came seven papers, all published in the Biochemical Journal. Two papers were co-authored with Krebs, on the micro-determination of uric acid and on the avian synthesis of uric acid; one with LeLoir on ketone metabolism. The four where he was the sole author were on ketogenesis.
Edson returned to New Zealand and became Lecturer in Biochemistry at Otago University.

Academic Life in New Zealand

Marriage and family

Edson married Suzanne Moor (1917–2009), a medical student, in 1938. Edson was 34, Suzanne 21. They had three children.
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