Arno Motulsky

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Arno Motulsky
Born(1923-07-05)July 5, 1923
University of Washington, Seattle
Academic advisorsLionel Penrose
Notable studentsJoseph L. Goldstein
David E. Comings
Charles J. Epstein
Judith Hall
Frederick Hecht
Gil Omenn

Arno Gunther Motulsky (5 July 1923 – 17 January 2018[2]) was a professor of medical genetics and genome sciences at the University of Washington. Motulsky is considered a founder of the field of medical genetics.[3][4][5][6] He is also considered the "father of pharmacogenetics", and is credited with coining the term.[5][4][7][2][8][9]

Early life

Arno Motulsky was born in Fischhausen near Königsberg, East Prussia[6] to German-Jewish parents, Hermann and Rena (Sass) Motulsky.[10][11]

As the Nazis consolidated power and adopted antisemitic laws, Arno's father Hermann, a merchant,[10] attempted to resist. Offended by the public display in the town square of Der Stürmer, the virulently antisemitic pro-Nazi newspaper, he forged a letter to the local Nazi Party branch directing them to remove the Stürmer display boxes.[12] The police traced the letter to him and he served time in prison for his dissidence. Hermann was later pressured by the mayor of Fischhausen to sell his store and other property at undervalued prices to an “Aryan” buyer. The family relocated to Hamburg, living off savings as they explored how and when to emigrate.

In June 1938, Hermann was arrested again as part of the Juni-Aktion,[13][14] a precursor to Kristallnacht. He was imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp for two months and released on the condition that he leave Germany. He was forced to emigrate without his family in October 1938, bound for Cuba.

At age 15 in 1939 Arno along with his mother and younger siblings, already on a waiting list for a visa to enter US, obtained a landing permit to join his father in Cuba. With more than 900 other Jewish refugees, the family embarked on the ship the MS St. Louis from Hamburg to Havana,[3]

Along with most other passengers, the Motulskys’ permit to enter Cuba was fraudulently sold by corrupt officials, and Cuba did not allow the refugees to disembark.[15] The captain then asked to land in a US port with the refugees, but the US government refused them entry,[11] as did Canada and other Western Hemisphere nations. The St. Louis was forced to head back towards Germany.[3][5] A few days before the ship was to land again in Hamburg, four countries agreed to take the refugees. By lots, the passengers were divided among England, France, Belgium, and Netherlands.[3][5] Arno's family was sent to Belgium in June 1939.[3][11]

The Germans invaded Belgium on May 10, 1940, and 16-year-old Arno was arrested by the Belgians for being a German ‘‘enemy alien.’’[3][5][16] He was separated from his family and spent a year in various internment camps at Saint-Cyprien, Pyrénées-Orientales and Gurs in southwestern France.[17] Days before his 18th birthday, he was able to arrange to leave France in June 1941 bearing an American visa.[3][5] He disembarked from Lisbon for the United States, where he arrived in August 1941 and reunited with his father in Chicago.[3][5]

Two years later, Motulsky and his father learned that the remainder of their immediate family were in Switzerland, unharmed.[3][11] The family was reunited in Chicago in 1946, and changed their surname to Molton: only Arno retained the original family name.[3]

Motulsky met Gretel Stern (born in 1924, also from Germany) in 1943. They married in 1945.[3][5][11]

Education

Motulsky had been barred from his primary education in Germany 1938 due to his Jewish ancestry, and only attended a year of high school in Belgium before the German invasion,

University of Illinois, Chicago.[6] He earned his medical doctorate in 3 years, in 1947.[3][5][6] Motulsky subsequently completed his residency in medicine and fellowship in hematology at the University of Illinois.[4][5][11]

Career

Commemorative plaque honoring the founding members of the University of Washington Division of Medical Genetics, Arno Motulsky and Stanley Gartler

Motulsky's first research efforts were conducted under the supervision of Karl Singer at the Michael Reese Hospital, where he investigated hemoglobinopathies.[4][5][6][11] Subsequent work involved inherited blood disorders, which he conducted at Walter Reed Army Medical Center 1951 to 1953 during service in the U.S. Army.[3][5][6]

In 1953, Motulsky joined the faculty of the department of medicine at the

Stanley Gartler became the first person to join the division.[19][20][11]

Motulsky's work spanned multiple subject areas he believed would benefit from genetic investigation. Among others, his professional interests were diverse and included studying the genetics of human blood and serum groups, biochemical genetics, the genetics of Werner syndrome, Mendelian and cytogenetic causes of birth defects, ecogenetics, multifactorial diseases, the genetics of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, genetic variation in color vision, genetic variation as a risk factor in anesthesia, and the genetics of pesticide metabolism.[4][16]

In 1957, Motulsky demonstrated that the differential response seen in drug-induced prolonged apnea during suxamethonium anesthesia could be attributed to a pseudocholinesterase deficiency genoytpe.[21][5][11] This discovery led him to propose the concept of pharmacogenetics in 1964.[8][5]

Motulsky was the first to propose that bone marrow transplantation could be used to cure genetic disorders of the hematopoietic system,[22] which his group was the first to practically demonstrate by using transplantation to cure hereditary spherocytosis in a murine model in 1967.[23][6][11]

Starting in 1970, Motulsky mentored his trainee Joseph L. Goldstein in investigations of the genetic variability of lipid metabolism.[4][5][11] This collaboration led to discovery of the familial inheritance patterns of hyperlipidemia,[24] and provided the first evidence that familial hypercholesterolemia was a monogenic disorder.[25] These were also foundational studies for Goldstein's 1985 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded with Michael Brown, “for their discoveries concerning the regulation of cholesterol metabolism.”[4]

During the 1980's Motulsky collaborated with colleague Samir Deeb to investigate the genetics underlying color vision, eventually identifying common genetic polymorphisms and structural variants that influence color perception.[5][26][27][20]

During the course of his career, Motulsky mentored many postdoctoral trainees in medical genetics, including Robert Sparks, John Mulvihill,

Gilbert S. Omenn, George Stamatoyannopoulos, George Fraser, Wylie Burke, Ephrat Levy-Lahad, and Joseph L. Goldstein.[5] Many of these trainees went on to establish genetics programs at a number of medical schools.[5][16]

Legacy

When he was 19, Motulsky wrote a short memoir (in English) of his experiences from 1939 to 1941, and this was published after his death.

US State Department for the survivors of the MS St. Louis and diplomats from countries that accepted them as refugees.[5]

He co-wrote his final publication, his autobiography, with Mary-Claire King.[11] Much of this memoir was based on an interview done as part of the Conversations in Genetics series.[30] Obituaries were published in the New York Times,[3] American Journal of Human Genetics,[5] American Journal of Medical Genetics,[31] Genetics in Medicine,[32] the Journal of Clinical investigation,[33] the Lancet,[16] the Scientist,[34] the Pharmacologist,[35] the British Journal of Medicine,[9] the National Academy of Sciences,[36] and UW Medicine.[37]

References

  1. ^ "Gretel Motulsky". The Seattle Times. September 20, 2009.
  2. ^ "In memoriam: Arno Motulsky - Department of Medicine - University of Washington". medicine.uw.edu. Archived from the original on 21 January 2018. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Denise, Grady (2018-01-29). "Arno Motulsky, a Founder of Medical Genetics, Dies at 94". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-03-09.
  4. ^
    S2CID 5039251
    .
  5. ^ .
  6. ^ .
  7. ^ Dreifus, Claudia (29 April 2008). "A Genetics Pioneer Sees a Bright Future, Cautiously". The New York Times.
  8. ^
    PMID 14110077
    .
  9. ^ .
  10. ^ a b Dr. Arno Motulsky - March 6, 2012, retrieved 2023-09-13
  11. ^
    PMID 27147253
    .
  12. OCLC 691910480.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link
    )
  13. OCLC 830931619.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link
    )
  14. . OCLC 317922748. pp. 22-33.
  15. .
  16. ^ .
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  20. ^ a b "Arno G. Motulsky Biographical Memoir" (PDF). Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  21. PMID 13462859
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  22. .
  23. .
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  28. .
  29. ^ Motulsky, Arno. "Arno Motulsky Shoah Foundation Testimony". YouTube.
  30. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1456&v=pXujI2cELTM
  31. S2CID 13794742
    .
  32. .
  33. .
  34. ^ "Father of Pharmacogenetics Dies". The Scientist Magazine. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
  35. ^ "The Pharmacologist June 2018". issuu. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
  36. Gartler, Stanley M.; Jarvik, Gail P. (November 21, 2019). "Arno G. Motulsky, a biographical memoir"
    (PDF). National Academy of Sciences.
  37. ^ "Honoring Arno - UW Medicine Magazine". UW Medicine Magazine. 2018-05-21. Retrieved 2018-06-01.

External links