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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1955
Hugo Theorell
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor E. Hammarsten, member of the Staff of Professors of the Royal Caroline Institute
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
The Collegium of Karolinska Institutet has this year awarded the
Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Professor Hugo Theorell for
his discoveries concerning the nature and mode of action of
oxidative enzymes.
More than a hundred years ago the vast field of research within
which Theorell's work has been carried out was opened up by a
Swedish investigator, Berzelius, who advanced the concept of
catalysis and postulated that vital reactions were brought about
by means of catalysts, subsequently called enzymes.
Let us as an example consider sugar, dissolved in water. It is
not acted upon by oxygen outside the organism, but in living
cells it is rapidly broken down by means of oxygen and enzymes,
with the simultaneous liberation of energy in a form suitable for
use in further reactions.
During the latter part of the 19th century the catalysts
postulated by Berzelius were detected - enzymes that quicken dull
and sluggish molecules such as oxygen and sugar which will not
spontaneously interact. The enzymes bring about this change in
the behaviour of the sluggish molecules, called activation, by
contacting them for a moment and then releasing them - now in an
active form - into the whirls of the molecular dance where they
originate new compounds. The enzyme will contact one molecule
after another without itself being changed or directly
participating in the dance. It is like a tool in a production
line, activating the inert material delivered to it by the belt
so that a maelstrom of rapid reaction is created beyond it. But
such a maelstrom can never come to rest since other tools are
soon encountered, each of which maintains the motion and adapts
it to a new rhythm. Thus the substances to be metabolized are
brought into a sequence of rapid transformations by a versatile
machinery built up of strictly specific units, the enzymes.
It is of fundamental importance to know the nature and mode of
action of everyone of these truly life-giving enzymes. Their
number is still unknown but it is certainly very great -
Berzelius' intuitive idea has been fully confirmed in this
respect.
In this field a Swedish investigator has once again substantially
enlarged our knowledge.
Hugo Theorell realized from the first the importance in
scientific investigation of seizing and keeping the initiative.
He has realized, too, that «live and let live» is a
fertilizing principle for teamwork. The able must not for long
remain mere collaborators. They must themselves show initiative
and become independent activators. An enzyme can give life to
sluggish material in such a way that a new independent enzyme is
created. Theorell's scientific work deals with active enzymes,
but he is himself an efficient activator on the more complex
human level.
His first discovery was made during the period 1933-1935 which,
as a Fellow of the Rockefeller Foundation, he spent with the foremost
pioneer in enzyme research, Otto
Warburg. He arrived with his own idea and with his own
technical means of substantiating it. He now made his great
classical discovery of the splitting and recombination of the
yellow enzyme. «Meister der Enzymforschung», Warburg
called him after this scientific achievement. Since then Theorell
has illuminated and clarified our understanding of several of the
enzymes necessary for life, and in a passionate search for truth
and fact in science has spared neither thoroughness nor
effort.
Following a logical plan of investigation and with continuous
refinement of technique he has clarified and enlarged that field
of knowledge in which he is an outstanding leader.
The iron atoms built into many oxidative enzymes constitute
functional centres, and many aspects of their intricate linkages
to other parts of the enzyme have been revealed, as well as other
important routes for the transport of electrons involved in the
functioning of oxidative enzymes. He and his collaborators have
shed light on the iron-containing enzymes called peroxidases.
Before Theorell began his investigations, our knowledge of these
substances was little more than guesswork. The extremely high
velocity of their reactions demanded the skilful application of a
range of advanced technique. It can safely be predicted that the
profound analyses thereby performed will be decisive for the
future integration of the role of the peroxidase system into the
pattern of action of living organisms. The function of another
group of iron-containing enzymes, the cytochromes, began to
emerge towards the end of the last century, and here again
Theorell has achieved an incisive analysis. The nature and
function of the muscle pigment were also established through his
investigations. He showed it to be an oxygen reservoir which
comes into action when the oxygen content of the blood is
depleted. It is a source of a «second wind».
A most important part of Theorell's researches has been concerned
with the velocities of enzyme reactions and the factors which
influence them, factors which determine the directions into which
the enzymes force the processes in living organisms. These
experiments are not only of basic importance but may be
considered model investigations in enzymology.
Professor Hugo Theorell. A fertile
imagination. An undeviating and critical accuracy. An astonishing
technical skill.
All scientists possess some of these attributes. Very few have
all. You are one of these few. In accordance with your gifts you
have chosen the most important of all tasks in biology. The
purification and the characterization of enzymes are essential
prerequisites for progress within the realm of biological
research. You have managed to bring about a decisive advance in
this fundamental field, and in so doing you have brilliantly
taken up and tended the heritage from Berzelius.
On behalf of Karolinska Institutet I ask you to receive your
Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for 1955 from the hands of
His Majesty the King.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1955, Editor Göran Liljestrand, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1956
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1955
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