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In Memoriam Elvin Abraham Kabat September 1, 1914 - June
16, 2000
 The Journal of Immunology,
2001, 166: 3635-3636. | Copyright 2001, The American Association of
Immunologists
Donald M. Marcus and Stuart F.
Schlossman
Elvin A.
Kabat, Ph.D., one of the great immunologists of the 20th
century, died on June 16, 2000 at the age of 85 in Falmouth,
Massachusetts. It is not possible, in this brief memorial, to
do justice to Dr. Kabat’s scientific accomplishments. During a
career of almost seven decades he published approximately 400
papers, and many books including Experimental
Immunochemistry, Structural Concepts in Immunology and
Immunochemistry, Blood Group Substances—Their Chemistry
and Immunochemistry, and Variable Regions of
Immunoglobulin Chains.
Dr. Kabat graduated from
the City College of New York at the age of 18 in 1932. His
graduate studies of the immunochemical and physical properties
of antibodies were performed in the laboratory of Dr. Michael
Heidelberger in the Department of Biochemistry at Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons. |
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Courtesy Of
The Kabat Family

| After receiving his Ph.D. in 1937, he spent a
postdoctoral year in the laboratories of Professors The Svedberg and
Arne Tiselius at the Institute of Physical Chemistry, in Uppsala,
Sweden. This period, from 1932 to 1938, produced a series of key
studies that molded Kabat’s scientific career. Heidelberger and
Kabat played a major role in the evolution of immunology from a
descriptive field into a quantitative chemical discipline. They
advocated the precise quantification of antigen-antibody
interactions and performed pioneering studies using new physical
chemical techniques to characterize antibody molecules. These
studies included the relationship between serum agglutinin and
precipitin reactions, the quantification of cross reactions, and the
demonstration that purified antibodies were gammaglobulins by moving
boundary electrophoresis and could be separated by
ultracentrifugation into 19s and 7s populations. These studies
provided the first critical insights into the physical properties
and heterogeneity of antibodies.
In 1938 Kabat returned to
New York as an Instructor in Pathology at Cornell University and in
1941 moved to Columbia University College of Physicians and
Surgeons, where he subsequently was appointed to Professorships in
Microbiology and Human Genetics and Development. In the earliest
stages of his career, World War II constrained his work, but despite
his commitment to the war effort he was still able to make a number
of important contributions to the quantitation of anaphylaxis, to
the nature and purification of plant toxins, and to the
immunochemical analysis of proteins. At the end of the war, he began
a series of pioneering studies in new areas, including the
immunochemistry of the ABO blood group substances, the production of
acute allergic encephalomyelitis in monkeys, and the relationship of
experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis to multiple sclerosis.
These latter studies initiated Kabat’s long-term interest in
autoimmunity and in the development of clinical assays for multiple
sclerosis. This initial span of his scientific career is recounted
in his paper entitled "Getting started 50 years ago—experiences,
perspectives and problems of the first 21 years" (Annu. Rev.
Immunol. 1:1–32, 1983). In this reminiscence, he relates in a
vivid manner the difficulties of living through the depths of the
depression, the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and reveals his
extraordinary courage and integrity during the McCarthy era.
In the early 1950s, Dr. Kabat began his pioneering work on
the dextran-antidextran system by analyzing allergic reactions to
dextrans used as blood expanders. After demonstrating that the
hypersensitivity reactions were indeed directed at dextran
carbohydrate, and not, as previously assumed, at protein
contaminants, he recognized the importance of using single
structurally well-defined molecules for analysis of antigenic
determinants and antibody specificity. His studies led him to
conclude that antibodies against dextran could recognize structures
as small as di- and trisaccharides, and as large as a
hexasaccharide. He also suggested, based on studies of linear and
branching dextrans, that some antibody combining sites were cavities
that recognized the terminal nonreducing ends of carbohydrate
chains, and other antibody binding sites were grooves, which
permitted them to bind to internal structures of extended
carbohydrate structures. These predictions, based on studies of
heterogeneous polyclonal antibodies, were verified by his subsequent
studies of monoclonal antibodies, and by crystallographic studies
performed by other scientists several decades later. He garnered a
wealth of information on antibody responses from his studies of the
dextran-antidextran and blood group systems.
His analytic
skills came to the forefront in the 1970s when, as a consequence of
the analysis of the peptide sequence of a large number of Ig
molecules, he recognized the existence of hypervariable and
framework regions in the V region domain of the Ig molecule.
Moreover, he suggested that these two different types of residues in
the V region subserved different functions and that the framework
regions were involved in three-dimensional folding, whereas the
hypervariable regions were intimately involved in the
antibody-binding site or complementarity-determining regions.
Affinity labeling and x-ray crystallographic studies have confirmed
many of his earlier predictions.
Scientists and students
came from all over the world to work with Dr. Kabat, and many people
who trained with him became leaders in glycobiology and immunology.
His passion for science, integrity, and high standards made him a
demanding taskmaster, and his critiques of experimental data could
be unsparing. His former trainees enjoyed getting together at
international meetings to reminisce about their experiences in his
laboratory and what it meant to be "Kabatized." Kabat’s wonderful
sense of humor and his talent as a raconteur leavened the serious
atmosphere of the laboratory. Scientists who trained in his
laboratory carried with them a model of how science should be
performed, and his trainees maintained enduring personal and
professional relationships with him.
His scientific
accomplishments were recognized by awards and honorary degrees too
numerous to list. Among these awards were election to the National
Academy of Sciences, the Louisa Gross Hurwitz Prize from Columbia
University, which he shared with Dr. Heidelberger and Dr. Henry
Kunkel, and the United States’ highest award for scientific
achievement, the National Medal of Science. The scientific community
has lost one of its greatest and most committed members. On behalf
of all his former associates and colleagues, we would like to extend
our sympathy to his family, and to celebrate with them a life of
remarkable achievement.

Articles:
> Main Article
> Obituary: Elvin A.
Kabat (1914-2000)
> In Memoriam Elvin Abraham Kabat September 1, 1914-June
16, 2000
> Elvin A. Kabat; at
85
> An
Appreciation of Elvin A. Kabat (1914-2000)
> Elvin A. Kabat CV
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