Abstract
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1953 was shared between Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, a German-British biochemist, and Fritz Albert Lipmann, a German-American biochemist for their pioneer work on metabolism.1 The former earned it for his discovery of tricarboxylic (TCA) or Krebs cycle, and the later earned it for his discovery of coenzyme A that completed the gap in the initial Krebs cycle. TCA cycle being a major source of energy for cells plays an important role in aerobic respiration in the mitochondria.
Published Version
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