David Adriaan van Dorp
David 'Davy' Adriaan van Dorp (April 27, 1915 in Amsterdam – February 19, 1995 in Vlaardingen) was a Dutch chemist.
Biography
Van Dorp was born as the son of Hendrik van Dorp and Maria van Dorp, and studied chemistry in Amsterdam where he received a PhD for his thesis Aneurine en gistphosphatase in 1941.
In 1946, while employed by the Dutch company Organon in Oss, Van Dorp and Jozef Ferdinand Arens ('Coco') (1914-2001) published the synthesis for vitamin A acid in the scientific journal Nature.[1] In 1947, they completed the first full synthesis for the complex compound vitamin A, by taking the final step and turning the acid in an alcohol.[2] Their synthesis was not to be used for commercial production, as an alternative route that was published soon after by Otto Isler (1910-1992) and co-workers at (Hoffmann-La Roche) turned out to be much more suited for upscaling.
Van Dorp joined the Unilever Research Laboratory in Vlaardingen in 1959, and was a key person in the studies regarding the role of arachidonic acid in the metabolic pathway to prostaglandin E2, in close cooperation with Sune K. Bergström who would later receive a Nobel prize for his work on prostaglandins.
In 1973 he became member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.[3]
References
- Arens JF, Van Dorp DA (February 1946). "Synthesis of some compounds possessing vitamin A activity". Nature. 157: 190. doi:10.1038/157190a0. PMID 21015124.
- Van Dorp DA, Arens JF (August 1947). "Synthesis of vitamin A aldehyde". Nature. 159 (4058): 189. doi:10.1038/160189a0. PMID 20256189.
- "D.A. van Dorp (1915 - 1995)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
- O. Isler, W. Huber, A. Ronco, M. Kofler, Helv. Chim. Acta 30, 1911-1927 (1947)
- D.A. van Dorp, R.K. Beerthuis, D.H. Nugteren, H. Vonkeman, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 90, 204-207 (1964)
- S. Bergström, H. Danielsson, B. Samuelsson, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 90, 207-210 (1964)
- D.A. van Dorp, My years in lipid research, Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society 60, 1645-1648 (1983)