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On December 3 and 4, Professor Robert Huber, Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemisty of 1988 gave a lecture named “The Beauty and Purpose of Life, the Architecture of Protein” at Quanzhou and Xiamen campus respectively. Robert Huber is a German biochemist and Nobel laureate. He was born 20 February In 1971 he became a director at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry where his team developed methods for the crystallography of proteins. In 1988 he received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry jointly with Johann Deisenhofer and Hartmut Michel. The trio were recognized for their work in first crystallizing an intramembrane protein important in photosynthesis in purple bacteria, and subsequently applying X-ray crystallography to elucidate the protein's structure[1]. The information provided the first insight into the structural bodies that performed the integral function of photosynthesis. This insight could be translated to understand the more complex analogue of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria[2][3] which is essentially the same as that in chloroplasts of higher plants.