Felix Hoppe-Seyler, a physiologist and chemist, became the principal founder of biochemistry. His text
Physiological Chemistry became the standard text for this new branch of applied chemistry. His numerous investigations include studies of
blood,
hemoglobin,
pus,
bile,
milk, and
urine. Hoppe-Seyler was the first scientist to describe the optical absorption spectrum of the red blood
pigment and its two distinctive absorption bands. He also recognized the binding of
oxygen to
erythrocytes as a function of
hemoglobin, which in turn creates the compound
oxyhemoglobin. Hoppe-Seyler was able to obtain hemoglobin in crystalline form, and confirmed that it contained
iron. He became an elected member of the
French Academy of Sciences, despite the unfavorable political terms between France and
Germany at that time, and this helped him gain an international reputation as the keen promoter of science. Hoppe-Seyler performed important studies of
chlorophyll. He is also credited with the isolation of several different
proteins (which he referred to as "proteids"). In addition, he was the first scientist to purify
lecithin and establish its composition. In 1877, he founded the
Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie (
Journal for Physiological Chemistry), and was its editor until his death in 1895. He died in
Wasserburg am Bodensee in the
Kingdom of Bavaria. ==Works==