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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1975
John Cornforth, Vladimir Prelog
Press Release
17 October 1975
The Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1975 Nobel Prize
in Chemistry with one half to
Professor John Warcup Cornforth, England
for his work on the stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed
reactions
and with the other half to
Professor Vladimir Prelog, Switzerland
for his research into the stereochemistry of organic molecules
and reactions
Cornforth has been awarded the Prize for his work on the
stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. This subject is
difficult to explain to the layman as it is a question of
geometry in three dimensions; it is concerned with the delicate
mechanism of important reactions in biological systems, where a
group of atoms takes the place of a certain hydrogen atom among
two or three, which may appear to be equivalent. The problem is
to decide which of the hydrogen atoms is replaced and if nearby
groups retain their positions or if they are rearranged in some
way. The enzyme leads the process in a quite uniform way. Without
this guidance, chaos would break out in the biological
system.
Cornforth "marks" the hydrogen atoms by making use of hydrogen's
three isotopes; ordinary hydrogen (mass 1), heavy hydrogen or
deuterium (mass 2) and radioactive hydrogen or tritium (mass 3).
He then makes use of their differing reaction speeds (the
lightest reacts the quickest). Only trace quantities of tritium
can be used; no more than a millionth or so of the molecules
involved in the reaction are marked. The planning of this
research is an outstanding intellectual achievement. Among the
biologically significant reactions the stereochemistry of which
has been clarified is the synthesis of steroids from mevalonic
acid via squalene and the condensations of acetate with glyoxylic
acid to malic acid and with oxalylacetic acid to citric acid.
Since Cornforth has shown the way similar research has been
initiated in other quarters.
The Prize has been awarded to Professor Prelog for his
research into the stereochemistry of organic molecules and
reactions, i.e. the connection between the course of chemical
reactions and the geometric form of the participating molecules.
His research spans a wide field.
One area of study has been "medium-sized rings" - ring-shaped
molecules with 8-12 carbon atoms. A ring of this kind is fairly
mobile one might almost say "flaccid"'; apparently remote parts
of the molecule can come into close contact with each other thus
causing unexpected reactions. Medium-sized rings are not unusual
in nature.
Another important area of his research is that concerned with
chiral molecules, formerly called asymmetric molecules. The word
"chiral" comes from the Greek meaning "hand" and signifies that
the molecules can have two forms differing from one another as
the right hand does from the left. Prelog has done very
significant research on reactions between chiral molecules. This
research is of fundamental importance to an understanding of
biological processes. Prelog has also led a very penetrating
discussion of the conditions governing chirality in complex
molecules.
Prelog has experimented with enzymes acting on simple molecules,
where the result depends on how the compound and the enzyme "suit
one another". Systematic experiments with simple compounds of
well-defined structures give valuable information about the
structure of enzymes and the way they act.
It should perhaps be mentioned that Professor Prelog has also done extensive research on special groups of natural products, e.g. alkaloids and antibiotics from microorganisms, where his profound knowledge of stereochemistry has been of great advantage.
MLA style: "Press Release: The 1975 Nobel Prize in Chemistry". Nobelprize.org. 13 Feb 2012 http://www.nobelprize.virtual.museum/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1975/press.html
