Education Hermann Niemeyer was born in
Ovalle, Chile, where his father was the German consul. His secondary education was at the
Internado Nacional Barros Arana in Santiago, where he joined an exceptional group of young people, including
Jorge Millas [es],
Nicanor Parra (brother of
Violeta Parra) and
Luis Oyarzún. Membership of this group, illustrated at a web page about Nicanor Parra that has a photograph that includes Niemeyer as a young man (easily recognizable to those who knew him as an old man), marked Niemeyer's character: his preference for frank and rigorous discussion; his humanism; his liking of music and painting; and his strictly republican politics. In 1943 he obtained the title of Doctor of Surgery for his thesis
Contribución al estudio del metabolismo de la célula hepática (
Contribution to the study of metabolism in the liver cell).
Postgraduate research For a few years Niemeyer worked in paediatrics, and moved later to biochemistry. From 1944 until 1953 he published a series of reports on malnutrition, some of them drawing on his biochemical experience, written with
Julio Meneghello Rivera. In the same period he published more strictly biochemical work with
Eduardo Cruz-Coke. In 1949 Niemeyer obtained a
Guggenheim research fellowship to work in the Department of Biochemistry at
Harvard. There he dedicated himself exclusively to research rather than paediatrics. He returned to the USA in 1957 to work at the
University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he worked with
Van Rensselaer Potter.
Career In his later years Niemeyer was Professor of Biochemistry of the University of Chile, with his research group in the
Faculty of Sciences, where he worked on enzymes of liver metabolism, especially liver
hexokinase. He was the first to report that this enzyme, monomeric in structure, displayed sigmoidal kinetics with respect to its substrate, glucose, a property previously thought to require multiple subunits. In 1988 he was one of the founders of the political movement
Independents for a Democratic Consensus. An account of Niemeyer's career has been given by the Spanish Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (SEBBM).
Personal life Hermann Niemeyer married María Marich ("Maruja") and had two daughters and a son. He died in
Santiago, Chile, on 7 June 1991 == Prizes and distinctions ==