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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1964
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor G. Hägg, Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Exactly 50 years ago, a Nobel Prize was awarded which we have much
reason to be reminded of today. Max von Laue was awarded the 1914 Nobel
Prize for physics for, according to the citation, "his discovery
of the diffraction of X-rays by crystals". It is this phenomenon
which has formed the basis of the work for which Mrs. Dorothy Crowfoot
Hodgkin has been awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry this year.
Very soon after von Laue's discovery, the two English scientists
Bragg, father
and son, began to apply X-ray diffraction in order to determine
how the atoms of a compound are situated in relation to each
other in a crystal. In other words, they tried to find out what
is usually known as the "structure" of the compound. Their
successes in this field resulted in their being jointly awarded
the 1915 Nobel Prize for physics.
Knowledge of a compound's structure is absolutely essential in
order to interpret its properties and reactions and to decide how
it might be synthetized from simpler compounds. To begin with,
only very simple structural problems could be solved by X-ray
diffraction, and these problems were taken almost entirely from
the field of inorganic chemistry. Organic compounds, compounds
containing carbon, usually have more complicated structures, and
these presented too many difficulties at this stage. However,
even then considerable possibilities existed for determining how
the atoms of an organic compound are bonded to each other, by
purely chemical methods. These methods were based largely upon
the knowledge obtained from the latter half of the nineteenth
century concerning the geometry of the bonds directed from a
carbon atom. Large molecules were broken down into components
whose structures were already known, and when some idea had been
obtained of how these components were joined together in the
large molecule this could often be confirmed by synthetizing the
molecule.
Gradually, however, such large and complicated molecules were
reached that these "classical" methods no longer yielded a
result. This was particularly so in the case of the structures of
many of the molecules which form part of living organisms and
participate in the vital processes. In these instances it was
necessary to obtain help from the field of physics, and in the
first place use was made of X-ray diffraction by crystals of the
compound concerned. During the period following the discovery of
X-ray diffraction, this method of structure determination had
been developed to such a degree that by the 1940's it began to be
possible to use it for solving the structures of organic
compounds which were insoluble by classical methods.
However, even today structure determination by X-ray methods does
not yield a direct route from the experimental data to the
structure. In complicated cases the scientist only obtains a
result after considerable mental effort, in which chemical
knowledge, imagination and intuition play a significant part. In
addition, the experimental data often have to be processed using
different mathematical treatments, which must be varied according
to the circumstances. Add to this the fact that the more
complicated the structure, the greater becomes the volume of
experimental data which must be amassed and processed. For
relatively simply built compounds it was possible to carry out
the calculations with pencil and paper. Nowadays it is nearly
always necessary to use electronic computers, and their arrival
has made an enormous difference to the possibility of carrying
out structure determinations. However, it is not usually possible
to just feed in the experimental data, and get out the figures
which give the final structure; the scientist's ability to handle
the data is still of vital importance. It is in this respect that
Mrs. Hodgkin has shown such exceptional skill.
Mrs. Hodgkin has carried out a large number of structure
determinations, primarily of substances which are of importance
biochemically and medically, but two of these substances deserve
especial mention. These are penicillin and vitamin
B12, whose structures have become completely and
definitely known through her efforts.
The use of penicillin in medicine began to be tested about the beginning
of the second world war, and its exceptional antibiotic properties
meant that the demand increased enormously. It was therefore obviously
desirable to find out whether penicillin itself or other related
compounds having a similar effect could be prepared by chemical
methods. For this purpose it was essential to determine the composition
and structure of penicillin, and a large number of chemists and
X-ray crystallographers in both England and the U.S.A. were put
on to this problem. Mrs. Hodgkin was to play a leading part in the
X-ray crystallographic work, and it was chiefly her efforts which
brought it to a satisfactory conclusion. The work was begun in 1942
and the structure was elucidated after four years' intensive work.
This was marked by close cooperation between organic chemists, X-ray
crystallographers and scientists in other branches of physical chemistry
and physics. A number of X-ray crystallographic methods were also
used here for the first time.
Mrs. Hodgkin's determination of the structure of penicillin bears
evidence of exceptional skill and great perseverance. The
difficulties were considerable, but this was not because the
molecule was particularly large. However, it possessed some
unknown features, which meant that the chemical properties did
not give sufficient guidance.
In 1948 Mrs. Hodgkin began her attempts to determine the
structure of vitamin B12, which had been isolated in
the same year. This vitamin can be synthetized by certain
bacteria and fungi, of which some play an active part in the
digestive processes of animals. The production of B12
is most pronounced in the ruminants, who seem to require this
vitamin in particularly large amounts. In most of the other
higher animals, for example in man, the production of
B12 is small, and their food must therefore contain
sufficient quantities of ready-made B12. Lack of
B12 in the diet, or a reduced ability to absorb this
vitamin via the walls of the alimentary canal, leads in
man to the fatal blood condition of pernicious anaemia. The
illness can always be arrested by injections of B12
which is only needed in very small quantities. It is still not
clear how B12 functions in the metabolic processes,
but in order to begin to come to grips with this problem it is
essential to know the structure in detail.
In 1956, after eight years' work, Mrs. Hodgkin and her
collaborators had clarified the B12 structure. Never
before had it been possible to determine the exact structure of
so large a molecule, and the result has been seen as a triumph
for X-ray crystallographic techniques. It was also, however, a
triumph for Mrs. Hodgkin. It is certain that the goal would never
have been reached at this stage without her skill and exceptional
intuition.
There is reason to hope that the detailed knowledge of the
B12 structure, revealed as a result of this work, will
make it possible both to understand how this vitamin assists in
the body's metabolism and to synthetize it. For the time being it
has to be produced via bacterial fermentation.
Professor Hodgkin. You have for many years directed your
efforts towards the determination of crystal structures by means
of X-ray diffraction techniques. You have solved a large number
of structural problems, the majority of great importance in biochemistry
and medicine, but there are two landmarks which stand out. The first
is the determination of the structure of penicillin, which has been
described as a magnificent start to a new era of crystallography.
The second, the determination of the structure of vitamin B12,
has been considered the crowning triumph of X-ray crystallographic
analysis, both in respect of the chemical and biological importance
of the results and the vast complexity of the structure.
Scientists working in many different fields, in X-ray
crystallography, in chemistry, and in medicine admire the great
determination and skill, involving what can only be described as
gifted intuition, which has always been the mark of your
work.
In recognition of your services to science the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences decided to award you this year's Nobel Prize
for Chemistry. To me has been granted the privilege of conveying
to you the most hearty congratulations of the Academy and of
requesting you to receive your prize from the hands of his
Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1964
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