Tsou was a strong advocate against academic fraud and pseudoscience, and led a public campaign against what he called "unhealthy practices" such as administrators' interference in scientific research.
Tsou's doctoral thesis was on the properties of the haemproteincytochrome c. According to Edward Slater, the research was the first step towards the eventual discovery of protein's structure.[3] After he and his wife both acquired their Ph.D. degrees in 1951, they returned to the newly established People's Republic of China and Tsou became a research professor at the Shanghai Institute of Physiology and Biochemistry where Wang Yinglai served as a deputy director.[3]
After 1958, Tsou was a member of the team at the Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry that first achieved the total chemical synthesis of insulin in 1965. His major contribution to the project was to form the disulphide bridges by joining two synthetic polypeptides using oxidation.[3][4] His method for estimating the number of essential amino acid residues in an enzyme by chemical modification, in which the remaining activity is plotted against the number of residues modified is known as the Tsou plot. In 1981, he was awarded the State Natural Science Award, First Class, for this achievement.[4]
After the end of the Cultural Revolution, Tsou was able to resume his research and was elected as an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1980.[3] He pioneered the study of enzyme inhibition kinetics, for which he was awarded the TWAS Prize in Biology in 1992.[4][6] Despite losing an entire decade of his prime, he published at least 118 papers, mostly in international journals.[3] In 1990, his autobiography was published in Comprehensive Biochemistry Volume 27.[2][4] By the end of his career, he won the State Natural Science Award First Class three times and Second Class three times.[1] Asteroid 325812 Zouchenglu, discovered by astronomers with the PMO NEO Survey Program at the Purple Mountain Observatory in 2008, was named in his memory.[7] The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 9 January 2020 (M.P.C. 120070).[8]
Activism
Tsou was a strong advocate against academic fraud and pseudoscience, and led a public campaign against what he called "unhealthy practices" such as administrators' interference in scientific research.[1][3][9] At the Institute of Biophysics, Tsou raised objections to Director Bei Shizhang's display of his achievement in cell formation. The criticism poisoned his relationship with Bei, making Tsou feel "uneasy" at the institute. Scientist Rao Yi later raised the same objections and praised Tsou's probity.[10]
Personal life
In 1948, Tsou married Li Lin (Anna Tsou), a fellow Chinese student at the Department of Metallurgy of Cambridge.[3][5] Li was the daughter of the renowned geologist Li Siguang, who was in England to preside over their wedding, and she would become a prominent physicist. Tsou later recalled the Cambridge years as the best time for his family.[5] Their daughter, geologist Zou Zongping (邹宗平),[11] was born in the 1950s in China.[3] Li Lin was also elected as an academician of the CAS, making the Li-Tsou family the only one in China that produced three academicians (including Li Siguang).[5]
Despite suffering from cancer in old age, Tsou continued to work until his death. He died in Beijing on 23 November 2006, at the age of 83.[3]
^ abcd"Zou Chenglu". Ho Leung Ho Lee Foundation. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
^ abcd"邹承鲁:忆恩师·回国" [Zou Chenglu: remembering my teacher and returning to China]. People's Daily. 24 November 2006. Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 28 June 2018.