Vincent Massey (November 28, 1926 – August 26, 2002) was an Australian
biochemist and
enzymologist best known for his contributions to the study of flavoenzymes. Massey was elected to the
National Academy of Sciences in 1995 for his use of physical biochemistry to relate
flavin chemistry to flavin enzymology.[1][2][3]
Biography
Family life
Massey grew up in a family of fishermen in a small village outside of
Berkeley in
New South Wales, Australia. Massey became interested in science in high school, to the point of performing home chemistry experiments. He was the first in his family to go to university and he obtained a Bachelor of Science from the
University of Sydney in
biochemistry in 1947.[4]
After obtaining a B.S. in biochemistry from the University of Sydney, Massey worked as a research biochemist for the CSIRO. He worked there for three years, and in that time published five papers on the inhibition of the
TCA cycle in
nematodes by fluoroacetate.[5] The CSIRO awarded him with a fellowship that would allow him to pursue his doctoral degree at the University of Cambridge.
Massey did his thesis work with
Malcolm Dixon. His thesis project revolved around the enzyme
fumarase (not a
flavoprotein), for example a study of the effects of temperature.[6] However, Massey was exposed to flavins in the lab through working with other students. After completing his thesis, he moved to the United States for a summer to work with
Robert A. Alberty at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. Here, he continued studying fumarase and published in 1954 possibly the first thorough paper studying steady-state
kinetics of an enzyme as a function of
pH.[7]
A colleague from Cambridge, Tom Singer, had accepted a position at the
Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit and recruited Massey to work with him to investigate the
enzymesuccinate dehydrogenase. Singer had recently discovered that
FAD was covalently bound to the enzyme.[8] This started Massey's career on flavins and
flavoproteins.
In 1957, Massey returned to England to be a lecturer at the
University of Sheffield in the Biochemistry Department. By 1961, he was promoted to senior lecturer. In 1963, Massey changed his career path and took a professorship position the
University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor. Massey was awarded the Henry Russel Lectureship in 1995, the highest recognition given to faculty members at the University of Michigan.
His major scientific contributions include the identification and kinetic characterization of
lipoamidedehydrogenase[9] and pioneering the methods of
stopped-flow[10] and rapid-freeze
electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to study enzyme mechanisms.[11] He published over 400 papers and at least an additional 50 book chapters, symposia or reviews, for example on artificial flavins as mechanistic probes.[12] He also had a significant mentoring role; his students included Graham Palmer,[13] Charles H. Williams,[14][3]Rowena G. Matthews, on
NADPH dehydrogenase ("old yellow enzyme"),[15]David P. Ballou,[13][3] and Paul Engel on butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase,[16] among others.
Scientific achievements
I.C.I. Fellow, University of Cambridge (1953-1955)
^Alberty, Robert A.; Massey, Vincent; Frieden, Carl; Fuhlbrigge, Armin R. (1954). "Studies of the Enzyme Fumarase. III.1 the Dependence of the Kinetic Constants at 25° upon the Concentration and pH of Phosphate Buffers". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 76 (9): 2485–2493.
doi:
10.1021/ja01638a053.
S2CID100746202.
^Singer, Thomas P.; Kearney, Edna B.; Massey, Vincent (1956). "Observations on the flavin moiety of succinic dehydrogenase". Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. 60 (1): 255–257.
doi:
10.1016/0003-9861(56)90415-5.
PMID13283607.
^Macheroux, Peter; Mulrooney, Scott B.; Williams, Charles H.; Massey, Vincent (1992). "Direct expression of active spinach glycolate oxidase in Escherichia coli". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Structure and Expression. 1132 (1): 11–16.
doi:
10.1016/0167-4781(92)90046-3.
hdl:2027.42/29898.
PMID1324737.