Pictures from Google Image Search

Casimir Funk

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Casimir Funk

The discoverer of vitamins, Polish American biochemist Casimir Funk (1884-1967) found that vitamins B1, B2, C, and D were necessary to human health and that vitamins contributed to the normal functioning of the hormonal system. His work led to the prevention of beriberi, rickets, scurvy, and other diseases caused by vitamin deficiency.

Studied in Switzerland and Germany

Funk was born February 23, 1884, in Warsaw, Poland, then part of Russia. His mother was Gustawa Zysan and his father was Jacques Funk, a dermatologist. At the time, education for Poles was difficult. All public schools were under Russia's control. Getting into a school required the help of someone with influence.

Funk was tutored at home until he was admitted to public school, where he did well at his studies. Dissatisfied with the education Funk was receiving, his parents enrolled him in the Warsaw Gymnasium in 1894. Funk graduated in 1900 and continued his education. He studied biology under Robert Chodat at the University of Geneva in Switzerland, then transferred to the University of Bern in Germany, where he studied chemistry under Carl Friedheim and Stanislaw Kostanecki. (Funk and Kostanecki later published an article on the synthesis of stilbestrols.)

In 1904, Funk earned his Ph.D. after completing his dissertation on how to prepare two stilbene dyes, Brasilin and Hmatoxylin. He then went to the Pasteur Institute in Paris, where he studied organic bases and amino acids under Gabriel Bertrand. During his time in Paris, Funk experimented with laccol, a phenol that caused him to suffer painful swelling. After he stopped those experiments, Funk began to study the building blocks of sugars and proteins.

In 1906, Funk held an unpaid position at the University of Berlin. There he worked in the laboratory of Emil Fischer. Under Fischer's assistant, Emil Abderhalden, Funk experimented with protein metabolism. A year later, Funk began a paid position as a biochemist at the Municipal Hospital in Wiesbaden, Germany. There, he found that when dogs were fed purified proteins they lost weight, but when they were fed horse meat and powdered milk, they gained weight. The results were not what Abderhalden expected; he decided that Funk's methods were at fault and discounted the data. When relations with Abderhalden did not improve, Funk transferred to the pediatric clinic at the University of Berlin.

Discovered "Vitamines"

In 1910, Funk left Germany and became a scholar at the Lister Institute of Preventative Medicine in London, England. In 1911 he published his first paper in English, on dihydroxyphenylalanine. Charles Martin, head of the institute, gave Funk another problem to study: beriberi. Beriberi is a disease of the peripheral nerves that causes pain and paralysis. At the time of Funk's study, it was not known that beriberi is caused by a lack of B1, but only that the disease occurred in areas of the Orient where the population consumed polished rice.

Earlier work in how deficiencies in diet could cause health problems were the basis for Funk's work. In 1873, research had shown that dogs did not thrive on a diet of washed meat and that pigeons that ate synthetic food developed symptoms of disease. At the turn of the 20th century, Christiaan Eikjman found that chickens made sick by a diet of polished rice would recover if fed rice hulls. He determined that rice hulls could cure some diseases, but he assumed wrongly that the problem arose from a toxic factor in rice. In the early 1900s, Sir Frederick Hopkins found that mice fed a diet of carbohydrates, proteins, fats, and mineral salts stopped growing if their diet did not contain milk. He determined that milk contained a substance that maintained health.

Building on the work of such researchers, Funk looked at how food factors affected health. It was already known that including citrus fruit in the diet could prevent scurvy and that rice hulls could prevent beriberi. But it was not clear why. To find the answer, Funk experimented with extracts made from the dark outer coating of rice that was removed during polishing. He found that there was a substance within that coating that cured beriberi. Funk also fed pigeons a diet of polished rice and found that within a short time the birds lost weight and became unhealthy. Since the birds were consuming enough proteins, he knew that the problem was not a protein or amino acid deficiency.

Birds fed the extract made from rice polish soon began to recover. Also, birds that ate small amounts of yeast regained their health. Funk decided that there was a substance in the rice polish and the yeast that was required in small amounts to maintain health. He published an article on the subject titled "On the Chemical Nature of the Substance which Cures Polyneuritis in Birds Induced by a Diet of Polished Rice."

The study led Funk to realize that there were substances in food essential to good health. He found that diseases such as beriberi, rickets, and scurvy could be cured by introducing into the diet organic compounds that contained certain chemical substances. Funk also maintained that certain diseases could be prevented by making sure the chemical substances were present in the diet. He called the substances "vitamines," with "vita" meaning vitality and "amines" meaning a chemical compound containing nitrogen. (The "e" was dropped in the 1920s when it was found that amines, or organic compounds derived from ammonia, were not always present.)

In 1912, Funk published his paper, "Vitamines." His publication earned him public recognition and a Beit Fellowship from the University of London. In 1913, Funk began working at the London Cancer Hospital Research Institute. He published his first book, Die Vitamine, translated in 1922 by Dr. H.E. Dubin into English. (Dubin collaborated with Funk to produce the first cod liver oil vitamin concentrate, called Oscodal.)

Later Career

In 1915 during World War I, Funk decided to leave England and accept a position at the Harriman Research Laboratory in New York City. Upon his arrival, he found to his dismay that the laboratory did not have research funding or equipment. Anxiety over how he would support his family caused Funk to suffer serious health problems. But he recovered and in 1916 accepted a position with Calco Company in Bound Brook, New Jersey. A year later, in 1917, he started working for the pharmaceutical firm Metz and Company in New York City. From 1918 to 1923, he also held an academic position at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he worked on the synthesis of adrenaline.

Funk became a United States citizen in 1920. In 1923, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, he returned to Poland and worked as chief of the Department of Biochemistry at the State Institute of Hygiene. While there, he increased the quality of insulin produced in the laboratory. In 1928, because of political unrest in Poland, he accepted a part-time position with Gr, my, a pharmaceutical house in Paris. There he founded Casa Biochemica, a private laboratory that produced biochemical products. From 1927 to 1936, Funk also worked as a biochemist for the Rousell Company.

In 1936, Funk published Vitamin and Mineral Therapy, also translated by H.E. Dubin. In this publication he called vitamin deficiencies insidious because they occur without warning and can cause irreparable damage. "Lack of a particular vitamin leads eventually to a particular nutritional disease," Funk wrote. "However, long before this deficiency disease becomes apparent, a shortage of one or more vitamins mayand usually doesgive rise to some tissue changes which lower the general resistance of the body making it susceptible to the attack of certain infections."

After Germany invaded Poland in 1939, Funk returned to New York and began working for the U.S. Vitamin Corporation, a company for which he had previously worked and which owned the copyright to Vitamin and Mineral Therapy. In 1947, with the support of the U.S. Vitamin Corporation, Funk became head of the Funk Foundation for Medical Research. In 1963, Funk gave up an active role in research when he retired. He died in New York City on November 20, 1976.

Married in 1914 to Alix Denise Schneidesch, Funk had two children. During his lifetime, he published more than 140 articles, including material on gonadotropic hormones, ulcers, and diabetes.

Legacy of Improved Health

Funk advanced humankind's understanding of nutrition and revolutionized the way people looked at their health. He never isolated a pure vitamin, but he did prepare concentrations that contained several vitamins. His conclusion that lack of vitamins in the diet was responsible for disease helped develop effective preventive and curative measures for anemia, beriberi, osteomalacia, pellagra, rickets, scurvy, and sprue.

During the vitamin craze that followed Funk's discoveries, many people overlooked Funk's observation that only small amounts of the substances were necessary to maintain health. Nutritional supplements were said to cure diseases, and vitamin makers claimed that synthetic vitamins improved energy and health. Consumers began to ingest large amounts of vitamins, despite the fact that small amounts were sufficient and that too much of some vitamins, such as A and D, are toxic to the body.

Although he is remembered primarily for his work with vitamins, Funk was also instrumental in advancing studies on hormones, cancer, and diabetes. His contributions to science include developing accurate views of the relationship between diet and health that led to advances in child and adult nutrition. He also contributed to getting proper nutrients into manufactured foods.

Other contributions made by Funk include finding the connection between Vitamin B complex and carbohydrate metabolism, discovering that vitamins influence the speed at which cancer grows, separating Vitamin D from cholesterol, and realizing that bacteria are a necessary part of the diet.

Generations of children made to consume cod liver oil by their parents may not appreciate Funk's work, but it is certain that his contributions have improved the health of countless. Indeed, his work clearly contributed to the increased life span many people enjoy in modern society.

Books

American National Biography, Oxford University Press, 1999.

Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement 8: 1966-1970, American Council of Learned Societies, 1988.

Funk, Casimir and H.E. Dubin, Vitamin and Mineral Therapy, U.S. Vitamin Corporation, 1936.

Periodicals

Washington Post, October 16, 1985.

Online

"Funk, Casimir," Encyclopedia.com, http://www.encyclopedia.com/articles/04822.html (January 6, 2002).

"Polish Born Biochemist Casimir Funk Introduces the Name Vitamin," Intellihealth, http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23722/21250/245416.html?d=dmtContent (January 6, 2002).

"Year 1912Casimir Funk Coins The Name 'Vitamin,"' India Infoline, http://www.indiainfoline.com/phar/mile/1912.html (January 6, 2002).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Casimir Funk." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 1 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Casimir Funk." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (December 1, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708021.html

"Casimir Funk." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved December 01, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708021.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Dingoes and the Call of Nature; Some Australians Warn of Danger in Turning Hunters Into Pets
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 10/26/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...he was mauled by a dingo pack in 2001. Authorities shot dozens of dingoes in response. Standing...for humans to keep dingoes as pets. "The dingo is a predator, a...may infiltrate wild dingo society and breed with pure dingoes," the bureau said...
Dingoes maul boy to death
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 4/30/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...boy was nipped by a dingo. The boys tried...mauled to death by the dingoes. His brother escaped...scene of several dingo attacks in recent...tourist was bitten by dingoes in February, 1999...when experts said a dingo would never attack...Beattie said two dingoes began following the...
Qld: Dingoes stay on Fraser Is, despite howls of protest
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 4/19/2007; 700+ words ; ...safety." Instead, dingo numbers were thinned...Terry Harper said dingoes should be valued...interests to let the dingoes behave as wild animals...management issue not a dingo management issue...times of the year. Dingo researcher Nick Baker...Fraser Island in the dingoes' autumn ...
Dingoes stalk and kill boy, 9, as he plays on Australian tourist island
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 5/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...She insisted that a dingo had taken Azaria...retrial. The two dingoes believed responsible...for a cull of the dingoes, a protected species...Queensland, said: "The dingo has a right to live...Parups believes a dingo cull is the only...to leave it to the dingoes," he said. "I...
The dingo's role revitalised.(Progress)
Magazine article from: Ecos; 2/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...can be effective dingo deterrents at scale...also means fewer dingoes will be exterminated...both sides of the dingo barrier fence. He...clear evidence that dingoes are beneficial...is researching dingo interactions on nine...interactions between dingoes and cats rather than...
Qld: Dingoes and children equals danger
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 11/11/2004; 700+ words ; ...fight off another dingo who attacked Dylan...major debate about dingoes. "For me, this...tourists who feed dingoes for reducing their...responded with a dingo management plan which...said. Australian Dingo Conservation Society...said the only way dingoes and humans could...
DINGOES KILL HOLIDAY BOY, 9 Brothers are attacked while they play on tourist island beach
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 4/30/2001; ; 589 words ; ...was nipped by a dingo. The terrified boys fled the dingoes, but were pursued...News claimed the dingo had been responsible...Beattie, said two dingoes began following...see whether all dingoes on the island...have been other dingo attacks in recent...
Qld: Dingoes on Fraser Island - it's a dog's life
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 5/15/2009; 700+ words ; ...I can't see that dingoes are more important...said mothers fearing a dingo attack were keeping...warnings and feed the dingoes. "This kind of encouragement of dingo-human interaction has led to a pack of dingoes becoming fearless of...
Dingo!(Animal Angles)(Canis lupus dingo )(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Odyssey; 1/1/2005; ; 686 words ; A dog? Not exactly. This is a dingo--Canis lupus dingo to be precise. Dingoes look like medium-size, domesticated...There are fewer and fewer purebred dingoes left in the wild. Soon, C. lupus dingo may become extinct--which would...
Vic: Dingoes to be inseminated to stop extinction
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 10/30/2005; 683 words ; ...30-2005 Vic: Dingoes to be inseminated...s rapidly dying dingo population through...six to 12 months. Dingo Care Network secretary Ernest Healy said dingoes cross-breeding...of dog attacks." Dingo Species Recovery...was hoped 50 to 100 dingoes would be bred over...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

dingo
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition dingo , wild dog ( Canis lupus dingo ) of Australia, believed to have been introduced thousands of years...with white markings on the underside, feet, and tip of tail. The dingo mates once a year and has a litter of up to eight pups. In the...
Friels, Colin 1952
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television ...lead role, 1987, for Ground Zero, and 1991, for Dingo; Australian Film Institute Award, best actor in a...Twentieth Century – Fox, 1991. John "Dingo" Anderson, Dingo (also known as Dingo — Dog of the Desert...
Canines
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science ...carnivore family, Canidae, including the wolves, coyote, foxes, dingo, jackals, and several species of wild dog. The family also...successful in Switzerland and Canada. Coyotes, jackals, the dingo, and species of wild dog comprise the rest of the canine family...
Canidae
Book article from: A Dictionary of Zoology ...some islands. They have been introduced to S. America and Australasia, where some are now feral (e.g. C. dingo , the dingo). Lycaon pictus (Cape hunting dog) is confined to Africa. Chrysocyon brachyurus (maned wolf) is restricted...
Monotremes
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science ...unknown, it may have originated as a defense against some long extinct predator. Today, dingoes occasionally prey on echidnas, but in historical terms, dingoes are relatively recent arrivals in Australia. Because echidnas are widely hunted as food...

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: