Education
He obtained his Bachelor of Surgery (1944) and his Doctor of Philosophy (1948) from Purdue University.
He obtained his Bachelor of Surgery (1944) and his Doctor of Philosophy (1948) from Purdue University.
The latter was under the direction of Henry B. Hass. After postdoctoral research under Paul Doctorate. Barlett (Harvard University), and Frank H. Westheimer (University of Chicago), he spent one year as a faculty member at the University of Connecticut. Thereafter, he was a professor of Chemistry at Illinois Institute of Technology in 1951, and then at Northwestern University in 1960.
He worked primarily in the study of reaction mechanisms and the biochemistry of enzyme action.
Bender demonstrated the two-step mechanism of catalysis for serine proteases, nucleophilic catalysis in ester hydrolysis and intramolecular catalysis in water. He also showed that cyclodextrin can be used to investigate catalysis of organic reactions within the scope of host-guest chemistry.
Finally, he and others reported on the synthesis of an organic compound as a model of an acylchymotrypsin intermediate. He was elected a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford University, and to the National Academy of Sciences, the latter in 1968.
He received an honorary degree from Purdue University in 1969.
He was the recipient of the Midwest Award of the American Chemical Society in 1972. Professor Bender retired from Northwestern in 1988. The Bender & Muriel South. Bender Distinguished Summer Lectures in Organic Chemistry was established in their honor in 1989 and continues to be hosted by Department of Chemistry at Northwestern University.
National Academy of Sciences]
During his career, Myron L. Bender was an active member of the Chicago Section of the American Chemical Society.