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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1961
Melvin Calvin
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor K. Myrbäck, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
In order to grow and to perform its various activities, every
living organism needs a supply of energy in some suitable form.
In this respect the organisms existing on this planet can be
divided into two fundamentally different groups. All animals,
including man, and also some lower organisms, require a supply of
energy-rich organic material, food-stuffs that "contain
calories", to use a popular expression. The energy contained in
the food-stuffs is made available by a biological oxidation
("combustion") of carbohydrates, fats, etc. Obviously, these
types of organisms, the so-called heterotrophic organisms, are
absolutely dependent on supplies of organic material, occurring
outside themselves.
As opposed to the heterotrophic organisms, the organisms
belonging to the second group, the so-called autotrophic
organisms, i.e. the green plants and certain bacteria, do not
require organic material supplied from without. They synthesize
organic compounds, primarily carbohydrates, from simple
substances, carbon dioxide and water, substances that, in
themselves, do not contain any calories. The energy needed for
the synthesis is supplied by light which is absorbed by the
organisms and subsequently converted by them from light energy
into chemical energy. The sequence of reactions by which carbon
dioxide and water are converted to carbohydrate is called carbon
dioxide assimilation or, taking into account the role of light
energy, photosynthesis.
It becomes obvious that photosynthesis not only provides an
explanation for the existence of the autotrophic organisms but
also furnishes food for man and animals. In other words,
photosynthesis is the absolute prerequisite for all life on earth
and the most fundamental of all biochemical reactions. It has
been estimated that plants and microorganisms on earth transform
about 6,000 tons of carbon from carbon dioxide to carbohydrate
per second, with at least four-fifths of this amount contributed
by organisms in the oceans.
It is understandable that a reaction of such importance and such
dimensions should attract the interest of science at an early
stage. For more than a century, however, progress in the
understanding of the chemistry of photosynthesis was very slow,
partly for want of suitable experimental methods.
More than fifty years ago it was recognized that photosynthesis
comprised two distinct phases, light reactions and dark
reactions. The Nobel Laureate today, Dr. Melvin Calvin, has spent
many years of research work on the chemistry of both phases of
photosynthesis and, in the case of the second phase, that is to
say the reactions leading from carbon dioxide to the assimilation
products - to quote Calvin, "the path of carbon in
photosynthesis" his work has resulted in the complete
clarification of an extremely intricate problem.
Success was achieved as a result of sharp-witted, skilful and
persistent work, to some degree facilitated by the availability
of certain modern experimental methods that allow investigations
which, in older times, were simply impossible. Two such methods
may be mentioned: the method of the isotopic labeling of
molecules, introduced by de Hevesy, and the chromatographic
methods, developed by Martin and Synge, which permit the
separation of minute quantities of compounds in complicated
mixtures. By an ingenious combination of these and many other
methods, Calvin succeeded in tracking the path of the carbon atom
from carbon dioxide, taken up by the plant, to the finished
assimilation products. The radioactive carbon isotope,
14C well-known also in other connections, has played a
particularly important role in Calvin's work.
Most of Calvin's experiments have been performed using a
microscopic green alga, Chlorella pyrerloidosa, but
parallel experiments with higher plants have shown that the
mechanism of carbon dioxide assimilation is the same in all
plants.
A question that had occupied scientists for more than a century,
was: "What is the primary product of the assimilation; what first
happens to the carbon dioxide taken up by the plant?" Calvin
demonstrated that the primary reaction is not, as had been
assumed previously, a reduction of carbon dioxide as such, but a
fixation of carbon dioxide to a substance, the carbon dioxide
acceptor, occurring in the plant. Calvin was able to show that
the product formed in this fixation reaction is an organic
compound known as phosphoglyceric acid.
This discovery was of fundamental importance for the development
that followed. The primary product of assimilation was recognized
as being a compound, well-known from earlier work as an
intermediary product of the biological degradation of
carbohydrates, and not some previously unknown compound;
phosphoglyceric acid had been identified as a breakdown product
of sugar as early as 1929 by Ragnar Nilsson here in Stockholm.
Calvin's identification of the primary assimilation product with
phosphoglyceric acid led to the very important conclusion that
there is an intimate connection between photosynthesis and
carbohydrate metabolism as a whole.
Calvin's subsequent investigations mapped out the path between
the primary product and the end products of assimilation, the
various carbohydrates. What had formerly been assumed to be a
reduction of carbon dioxide was shown to be a reduction of
phosphoglyceric acid. For a reduction of phosphoglyceric acid to
the carbohydrate level, the plant has to supply both a reducing
agent and a so-called energy-rich phosphate. It is for the
production of these co-factors that plants utilize light energy.
This means that light energy is not directly involved in the
reactions of assimilation; light energy is used for regeneration
of co-factors which are consumed in the assimilation
reactions.
As mentioned above, the primary reaction in the assimilation is a
fixation of carbon dioxide to an acceptor, the chemical nature of
which has been established by Calvin. Rather unexpectedly, this
acceptor was found to be a derivative of a sugar, ribulose, to
which nobody had paid much attention previously. When carbon
dioxide is fixed to the ribulose derivative, phosphoglyceric acid
is formed.
As the acceptor is consumed during the fixation reaction it must
obviously be regenerated from the assimilation products. Calvin
has elucidated the very complicated mechanism of this
regeneration. Between the primary product and the acceptor there
are no less than ten intermediary products and the reactions
between these products are catalyzed by eleven different
enzymes.
Professor Melvin Calvin. Your
investigations on plant photosynthesis have shed light on a field
of biochemistry which was, until recently, veiled in obscurity.
You have tracked the various steps of the path of carbon in
photosynthesis and created a clear picture of this complicated
sequence of reactions, reactions of immense importance for life
on our planet.
On behalf of the Royal Academy of Sciences, I extend to you our
warm congratulations, and I ask you to receive this year's Nobel
Prize for Chemistry from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1961
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