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Helen T. Parsons : ウィキペディア英語版 | Helen T. Parsons
Helen T. Parsons (March 26, 1886; Arkansas City, Kansas – December 30, 1977; Madison, Wisconsin) was an American biochemist. She developed early work in B vitamins. ==Early life and education==
Parsons was born in Arkansas City, Kansas. Her family believed in education and had a scholarly tradition.〔 Her father was a physician, who made house calls in the prairie.〔 She farmed during high school and saved money from a tomato crop to attend teachers' college in Pittsburg, Kansas.〔 She studied home economics in teachers' college, eventually attending Kansas State Agricultural College.〔〔(Minds @UW oral tradition archived )〕 In 1913, she went to the University of Wisconsin to begin graduate study. There, Abby Marlatt, head of home economics, offered her an assistantship for graduate study. She studied under Elmer McCollum, observing original work on vitamin A and the naming of fat-soluble A and water-soluble B.〔 In 1916, she received her master's degree on the dietary properties of potatoes. Published in 1918, she showed that the dietary properties of the potato are much like that of cereal grains.〔(The Journal of Biological Chemistry )〕 Working in McCollum's lab, Parsons had access to the nation's first colony of white rats for use in nutrition experiments. In the following year, Parsons went with McCollum to Johns Hopkins University to work in the School of Hygiene and Public Health. Here, Parsons made a major breakthrough. Unlike humans or guinea pigs, rats did not need the anti-scorbutic substance in their diets. Anti-scorbutic agents assist in counteracting scurvy. She hypothesized that the rat does use water-soluble C but gets it in some way other than in food. In 1920, Parsons returned to Wisconsin to take a faculty position and conduct research on Vitamin C requirements.〔
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