However, it required some years before the scientific community in general accepted that flexibility and disorder are very relevant molecular properties also in other systems.
I learned easily and had time to follow my inclination for sports (light athletics and skiing) and chemistry, which I taught myself by reading all textbooks I could get.
This discovery convinced me of the power of crystallography and led me to continue in this field.
In 1970, I had begun work on the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor which has later become the model compound for the development of protein NMR, molecular dynamics, and experimental folding studies in other laboratories.
I was born February 20, 1937 in Munchen as the first child of Sebastian and Helene Huber.