'James Bertram Collip' (
November 20,
1892 –
June 19,
1965) was part of the
Toronto group which isolated
insulin. Born in
Belleville, Ontario, he served as the Dean of Medicine at the
University of Western Ontario from
1947-
1961, where he was also a member of the
Kappa Alpha Society.
He enrolled at
Trinity College at the
University of Toronto at the age of 15, and studied
physiology and
biochemistry. He obtained a Ph.D in Biochemistry from the University of Toronto in 1916.
In 1915, at the age of 22, Collip accepted a lecturing position in
Edmonton at the
University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine, shortly before completing his doctorate studies. He fulfilled the role for 13 years, rising to the position of Professor and Head of the Department of Biochemistry in 1920. His research at the time was mainly focused on
blood chemistry of
vertebrates and
invertebrates.
He took a
sabbatical leave beginning in April 1921, and travelled to Toronto on a
Rockefeller Travelling Scholarship for a six month position with Professor
J. J. R. MacLeod of the University of Toronto's Department of Physiology. There his research program (on the effect of pH on the concentration of sugar in the blood) would take him to marine biological stations in
Woods Hole,
Massachusetts and
St. Andrews,
New Brunswick before he returned to Toronto late in the year.
MacLeod was overseeing the work of
Frederick Banting and
Charles Best in their search for a treatment for
diabetes which they had begun in May 1921. In December, when Banting and Best were having difficulties in refining the pancreatic extract, MacLeod freed Collip from his other research to enable him to join the research team. Collip's task was to prepare insulin in a more pure, usable form than Banting and Best had been able to achieve to date. Within a month, Collip achieved the goal of preparing a pancreatic extract pure enough to use in clinical trials.
Successful trials were soon completed and the future of insulin was assured. Banting, Best and Collip subsequently shared the patent for insulin, which they sold to the University of Toronto for one dollar.
Regrettably, due to disagreements between Banting and MacLeod, there was ill-will generated within the team. The
Nobel Prize for Medicine was awarded to Banting and MacLeod in 1923. Feeling that Best had been overlooked in the award, Banting shared his portion with his Best. In response, MacLeod shared his portion with Collip. Nonetheless, Collip (and MacLeod) have been largely forgotten as co-discoverers of insulin.
Following this early success, Collip returned to Edmonton to resume his position with the University, and to pursue his own studies on hormone research. He is regarded as a pioneer of
endocrine research. He did pioneering work with the hormone
ACTH.
He died at the age of 72.
Honours (Partial list)
★ Fellow of the
Royal Society of Canada, 1925
★ Fellow of the
Royal Society, 1933
★ D.Sc.,
Harvard University, 1936
★ Commander of the
Order of the British Empire, 1943
★ D.Sc.,
Oxford University, 1946
★
Medal of Freedom with Silver Palm (US), 1947
★ Banting Medal of the
American Diabetes Association , 1960
★ Honorary Doctorate from the
University of Western Ontario, 1964
Readings
★
Michael Bliss, ''The Discovery of Insulin'', 1982, McLellan & Stewart
★ M. L. Barr and R. J Rossiter, ''James Bertram Collip 1892-1965, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society'', Volume 19, December 1973