Vincent du Vigneaud's speech at the Nobel Banquet in Stockholm, December 10, 1955
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Your
Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen:
I wish to express to you my deep appreciation for the honor that
you have bestowed upon me by the Nobel Award. This honor is
without question the most signal honor that could come to a
chemist. I am deeply grateful to the Nobel Foundation and the
Royal Swedish Academy of Science for the recognition, as
expressed in the terms of the citation, of the "work on
biochemically important sulfur compounds, especially the first
synthesis of a polypeptide hormone". This hormone, oxytocin, the
principal uterine-contracting and milk-ejecting hormone of the
posterior pituitary gland, is a sulfur-containing compound, and
its synthesis was the culmination of many experiences along a
trail of research stemming from my original interest in sulfur
and in insulin. It was truly a trail of "sulfur research".
I have had the privilege and the thrill of following this trail of research in the company of a group of graduate students and postdoctoral associates, without whose loyal and effective collaboration the advances along this trail could not have come to pass, and in the acceptance of this high honor, I wish to make due acknowledgment to this splendid collaboration.
Finally, allow me again to thank you, not only for the award, but for your gracious hospitality to both Mrs. Du Vigneaud and myself. We are very happy to be here.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1955, Editor Göran Liljestrand, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1956
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1955