Department of Microbiology, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Professor Gest was born in London, England and emigrated with his family to the US when he was one year old. During undergraduate studies at UCLA (B.A., 1942) he spent two summers assisting Max Delbruck and Salvador Luria doing research on bacterial viruses at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (New York). In 1942, Gest began graduate work with Delbruck at Vanderbilt University, but World War II interrupted his studies. He accepted a position on the Manhattan Atomic Bomb Project with the eminent physical chemist Charles Coryell. Their research focuses on characterization of the radioactive elements formed in uranium fission. After World War II ended, Gest completed graduate work (Ph.D. 1949) at Washington University (St. Louis) as the first student of Martin Kamen, a pioneer nuclear chemist renowned as the co-discoverer of carbon 14. During this period, Gest also did research with Alfred Hershey on the fate of radioactive phosphorus during the multiplication of bacterial viruses. The latter culminated in the discovery of "P-32 suicide" of bacteriophage. Prior to 1950, Gest had worked with Delbruck, Luria and Hershey, who shared a Nobel Prize in 1969.
Gest has been on the faculties of Case Western Reserve
University and Washington University. He has been a visiting
researcher at the California Institute of Technology, Dartmouth
Medical School, Stanford University, Oxford University, Tokyo
University, and UCLA. Professor Gest has been a Guggenheim Fellow
twice and has served on a number of advisory committees of the US
Government. He is widely recognized for his research on microbial
physiology and metabolism, especially with photosynthetic bacteria.
Gest is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, American Society for Microbiology, American Academy of
Microbiology, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Office: (812) 855-9612; Fax: (812) 855-6705; E-mail: hgest@sunflower.bio.indiana.edu