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Susan Leeman

Susan Leeman
Born (1930-05-09) May 9, 1930 (age 86)
Chicago, Illinois
Nationality American
Fields Endocrinology
Alma mater Radcliffe College
Thesis The Problem of Neurohormonal Stimulation of the Secretion of Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (1958)
Known for Discovery of Substance P and neurotensin

Susan E. Leeman (born May 9, 1930) is an American endocrinologist considered one of the founders of neuroendocrinology.

Susan Leeman was born Susan Epstein in Chicago in 1930 into a family which had originally emigrated from Russia to New York City. Her father was an academic metallurgist and her mother attended college in a time when few other women did. When Leeman was six weeks old she and her family moved to Columbus, Ohio before moving to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania when she was six. A Jewish family, they received a large amount of antisemitism.

Leeman received her bachelor's degree from Goucher College 1951 and her masters degree and PhD from Radcliffe College in 1954 and 1958 respectively.

Leeman began her career at Harvard University in 1958 but moved to Brandeis University the following year where she stayed for the next 12 years. In 1972, having not yet received a full position, Leeman returned to Harvard as an assistant professor until 1980. She then left the medical school when she realised that she would not be offered a tenure there either, gaining a tenured professorship in physiology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. In 1992 Leeman left Massachusetts to help start the pharmacology department at Boston University.

In 1974 Leeman discovered the structure of substance P – a peptide whose discovery won Ulf von Euler the Nobel Prize in 1970. She also discovered another peptide, neurotensin.


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