Presentation Speech by Professor H.G. Söderbaum, Chairman of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, on December 10, 1929
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The fermentation of liquids containing sugar - there we have a
chemical reaction older than all chemical science. The point of
time when men first began to take this reaction into their
service is really lost in the mists of antiquity, before the
beginning of history. The peculiar and apparently self-caused
process by which an innocent fruit juice is transformed with the
active formation of scum, into a drink which is either
stimulating or intoxicating according to the quantity partaken,
attracted attention in the very earliest times; and to many
peoples it appeared so wonderful that nothing less than the
cooperation of a divinity seemed to them possible as an
explanation.
Our enlightened time has scarcely the right to marvel at this,
when we take into consideration how long a time science has since
required to obtain an acceptable conception of the nature of
fermentation. Here we stand face to face with one of the most
complicated and difficult problems of chemical research. Little
more than a couple of centuries separate us from the time when
men first began to perceive that the fermenting substance was
sugar, which under the influence of a certain something
was decomposed, with carbonic acid and ethyl alcohol as the final
products of the decomposition.
But what this "something" was, and how it worked, still remained
unsolved questions, long defying the most penetrating attempts at
interpretation. It was not until our own days that it has been
vouchsafed to us to have a fairly satisfactory answer to these
questions, but even here the process of development has been
slow, toilsome, and it took place, so to speak, in several
instalments.
In carrying out the provisions of Alfred Nobel's Will, the
Swedish Academy of Sciences has already once before had its
attention directed to this sphere of research. That was in 1907,
when Eduard Buchner was awarded
the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of non-cellular
fermentation. At the time complaints were raised in certain
quarters against this award as being insufficiently justified.
Seen in the perspective of distance in time, however, Buchner's
discovery has more and more stood out as a line of demarcation
between two different epochs, pointing the way to a new phase in
the history of the chemistry of fermentation.
Buchner's discovery marked the final decision in a long struggle
between two distinct schools - one, the older one, represented by
Justus von Liebig the other, the younger one, represented by
Louis Pasteur. According to the former school, fermentation was a
purely chemical process, evoked by an unorganized ferment with
unstable properties, which were imparted to the fermenting
substance and thereby brought about its decomposition. According
to the latter school, it was rather a physiological process,
inseparably connected with the vital act of a microorganism known
as the "fungus of fermentation". Buchner's discovery made it
evident that to some extent both were right, but also to some
extent both were wrong, and, consequently, that the truth lay
between the two.
But the value of the discovery makes itself known in a still more
definite way through the impulse it has given to later research.
In fact, during the last three decades that research has made
such great advances, has given such an enlarged insight into the
mechanism of the process of fermentation, that the Academy of
Sciences has found the time ripe once again to award a Nobel
Prize in this department. In so doing the Academy has deemed it
right to divide equally the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the
present year between Professor Arthur Harden and Professor Hans
von Euler.
Buchner assumed in the yeast juice the
presence of a uniform ferment or enzyme, known as "zymase".
When, however, Harden and his fellow-workers filtered a quantity
of Buchner's yeast-juice through a gelatine filter, known as an
"ultrafilter", and thereby split it up into two fractions (a
filtrate and a sediment that did not pass through the filter),
the curious state of things occurred that neither of these
fractions was any longer able to bring about fermentation, but
that after being mixed with one another they recovered that
capacity.
Harden explained this by saying that a high-molecular enzyme, the
zymase proper, was left on the filter, which let through a
low-molecular complementary enzyme, which for the sake of brevity
was called co-enzyme or co-zymase.
Another no less important advance is made in Harden's
demonstration of the hitherto neglected part played by phosphoric
acid in the process of fermentation. It has been found that a
certain addition of phosphate gives rise to an equivalent amount
of carbonic acid and ethyl alcohol. This effect is associated
with the formation of one or more definite compounds between
sugar and phosphoric acid - known as the "zymo-phosphates",
amongst which a glucose monophosphate and a glucose diphosphate
are to be regarded as the most important.
In the same measure as research in this department has made new
conquests, a clearer and clearer insight has been gained into the
importance of this discovery. In particular the work of von Euler
and his pupils during the last few years greatly contributed to
the unravelling of the mechanism of phosphorization.
The primary function of phosphoric acid in fermentation consists,
according to von Euler, in the fact that in cooperation with an
enzyme it gives rise to glucose monophosphate, identical with the
monophosphate discovered by Harden and Robison. This phosphate
afterwards undergoes a mutation in the presence of co-zymase,
inasmuch as a glucose diphosphate and an active glucose are
formed, after which the latter yields the necessary material for
the subsequent stages of the fermentation.
This demonstration of the part of mutase played by the co-zymase,
or in other words of the identity of co-zymase and co-mutase, is
of fundamental importance, for it has fully revealed the central
position in the process of fermentation of the complementary
enzyme in question.
The researches of von Euler and his pupils have further led to
the concentration of the co-zymase and to a far more exact study
of its properties than had been previously possible. They have
been able to determine approximately its molecular weight, which
has been found to be about 490; and they have also been able to
draw certain definite conclusions concerning its chemical nature,
which make it highly probable that we have here what the chemists
call a pentosenucleoside. The production of a co-zymase with a
high activity has also shown in a brilliant manner the character
of that enzyme as a specific activator.
Finally, what gives special interest to the study to the
complicated reaction mechanism of the fermentation of sugar is
that it has been possible to draw from it important conclusions
concerning carbohydrate metabolism in general in both the
vegetable and the animal organism.
The brief summary which has now been given,
and which, in view of the scanty time allowed, has necessarily
been extremely fragmentary, will in any case probably have shown
that there is an extremely intimate connection between the
researches of Harden and von Euler in this field. On the one
hand, the fundamental discoveries of Harden have formed the
precondition and point of departure for the various work of von
Euler; and on the other hand, it is only the work of the latter
that has made fully evident the importance of Harden's
discovery.
Under such circumstances the Academy of Sciences has not
hesitated this time to avail itself of the expedient that is
offered by the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation of dividing the
prize between two equally meritorious scientists.
Professor Harden. When the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences resolved to adjudge to you, together with
Professor von Euler, this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry on
account of your important contributions to our knowledge of
alcoholic fermentation, the Academy had let herself guided by a
firm conviction that these contributions had opened indeed a new
chapter in the investigation of that very complicated
matter.
It is with the most sincere gratification that I have the honour
of conveying to you the congratulations of the Academy on this
distinction, the outward signs of which you are now about to
receive.
Professor von Euler. It is a great pleasure to the Swedish Academy of Sciences to be able to award this time the Alfred Nobel's Prize also to one of her members, and so much more since during a long series of years we have been in the position to follow from nearby your energetic, persevering, and systematic investigations. The Academy is also firmly convinced that the distinction which has fallen upon you today, will not contain for you the temptation to rest on laurels already obtained, but that on the contrary it will mean a stimulus to continued and, as we all hope, successful work in the service of biochemistry.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1929