Torriani-Gorini was born to Ada Forti and Carlo Torriani on December 19, 1918, in Milan, just after her brother had died of the Spanish flu.[1] She was raised in Milan alongside her younger sister.[1] In 1942, Torriani-Gorini graduated from the University of Milan with a Ph.D. in botany.[2][1]
Career
After earning her PhD at the University of Milan, Torriani-Gorini was a research associate at the Giulio Ronzoni Istituto Chimica e Biochimica in Milan from 1942 to 1948.[2][1] She then began working at the Institut Pasteur, where from 1950 to 1956 she served on the faculty,[3][2][1] working alongside Melvin Cohn and Jacques Monod.[3][4][1][5]
Torriani-Gorini started working at Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a research associate in 1960.[2][1] In 1968, she attended the symposia on quantitative biology for the replication of DNA in microorganisms.[6] From 1970 to 1973 Torriani-Gorini was on the Undergraduate Advising Committee,[1] and she took part in the Wellesley-MIT Exchange Program from 1974 to 1978.[1] In 1971 Torriani-Gorini became an associate professor of biology and was promoted to a full professor in 1976.[2][1][7] In 1975, Torriani-Gorini was on the Women’s Advisory Committee, where she advocated for women in science.[1][8]
Luigi Gorini and Torriani-Gorini met as colleagues in the lab in Milan in the early 1940s.[3][1] Luigi Gorini was a socialist who was involved in anti-fascist activism.[3][1] The two got married after World War II.[9][1] The couple had a son, who died of cancer in 2019.[3][10][1][11]
Torriani-Gorini and Gorini shared a passion for social and economic justice.[1] In particular, they heavily protested against repression, inequality, and military aggression.[1] The two transformed a house in the village of Selvino into a home for approximately 800 Jewish orphans who were liberated from concentration camps, in preparation for emigration to Palestine.[3][9][1][11][10] For their work to house these children and their advocacy against fascism, they received the Raoul Wallenberg Commemorative Award from the state chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews.[3][9] In 1976, the government of Israel honored them for their efforts in housing the orphaned Jewish children and teens.[3] They were recognized by the Martyrs and Heroes Archives at Yad-Vashem, Israel.[3]
The couple lived in Paris for 10 years before moving to the United States in 1956.[2][9][1] According to their son, when they moved to the United States, Torriani-Gorini and Gorini continued to speak out, through newspapers, protests, and lectures, against "...US support of repressive, right-wing governments in Southeast Asia, the Americas, and Africa."[1] They became US citizens in the early 1960s.[1] Additionally, Torriani-Gorini made many charitable donations to the Southern Poverty Law Center and Citizens for Participation in Political Action.[1] Following the death of her husband in 1976, Torriani-Gorini took up hiking in Nepal.[1] When she was 78 years old, she went on her final hike to the Annapurna Sanctuary.[1]
Torriani-Gorini died on May 2, 2013, at 94 years old in her home in Massachusetts.[2]
Notable publications
Cohn, M., & Torriani, A.-M. (1952). The relationships in the biosynthesis of the β-galactosidase- and pz-proteins in escherichia coli. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta, 10, 280–289. doi:10.1016/0006-3002(53)90251-0
Ludtke, D., Bernstein, J., Hamilton, C., & Torriani, A. (1984). Identification of the PHOM gene product and its regulation in escherichia coli K-12. Journal of Bacteriology, 159(1), 19–25. doi:10.1128/jb.159.1.19-25.1984
Rao, N. N., & Torriani, A. (1988). Utilization by escherichia coli of a high-molecular-weight, linear polyphosphate: Roles of phosphatases and pore proteins. Journal of Bacteriology, 170(11), 5216–5223. doi:10.1128/jb.170.11.5216-5223.1988
Rao, N. N., Wang, E., Yashphe, J., & Torriani, A. (1986). Nucleotide pool in pho regulon mutants and alkaline phosphatase synthesis in escherichia coli. Journal of Bacteriology, 166(1), 205–211. doi:10.1128/jb.166.1.205-211.1986
Torriani, A. (1959, January). Effect of inorganic phosphate (PI) on formation of phosphates by e-coli. In Federation Proceedings (Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 339–339). 9650 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20814-3998: FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL.
Torriani, Annamaria (August 1990). "From cell membrane to nucleotides: The phosphate regulon in Escherichia coli". BioEssays. 12 (8): 371–376. doi:10.1002/bies.950120804. PMID2241934. S2CID25924916.
^ abcdefghiBeckwith, J. R., & Fraenkel, D. (1980). In Luigi Gorini: 1903 - 1976 (pp. 204–205). essay, National Academy Press.
^Cohen, G. N. (2002, December). The Early Influence of the Institut Pasteur on the Emergence of Molecular Biology. Journal of Biological Chemistry. Retrieved December 4, 2021, from https://www.jbc.org/article/S0021-9258(19)31322-5/fulltext.
^Stent, G. S. (1965). 1965 Nobel Laureates in Medicine or Physiology. Science, 150(3695), 462–464. JSTOR1716935
^Replication of DNA in Micro-Organisms - List of those attending the symposium in 1968. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology. (n.d.). Retrieved December 4, 2021, from http://library.cshl.edu/symposia/1968/participants.html.