Presentation Speech* by Professor Karl Myrbäck, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The 1970 Nobel Prize for chemistry has been awarded to Dr. Luis
Leloir for work of fundamental importance for biochemistry. Dr.
Leloir receives the prize for his discovery of the sugar
nucleotides and their function in the biosynthesis of
carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates, as everybody knows, form a comprehensive group of
naturally occurring substances, which include innumerable sugars
and sugar derivatives, as well as high-molecular carbohydrates
(polysaccharides) like starch and cellulose in plants and
glycogen in animals. A polysaccharide molecule is composed of a
large number of sugar or sugar-like units.
Carbohydrates are of great importance in biology. The unique
reaction, which makes life possible on Earth, namely the
assimilation of the green plants, produces sugar, from which
originate, not only all carbohydrates but, indirectly, also all
other components of living organisms.
The important role of carbohydrates, especially sugars and
starch, in human food and, generally, in the metabolism of living
organisms, is well known. The biological break-down of
carbohydrates (often spoken of as "combustion") supplies the
principal part of the energy that every organism needs for
various vital processes. It is not surprising, therefore, that
the carbohydrates and their metabolism have been the subject of
comprehensive and in many respects successful biochemical and
medical research for a long time. While working on these
problems, Leloir made the discoveries for which he has now been
awarded the Nobel Prize.
Before these discoveries were made, our knowledge of carbohydrate
biochemistry was rather one-sided. The biological processes which
break down carbohydrates, including the so-called combustion,
have been well known for several decades. Over the years many
Nobel Prizes have been awarded for chemistry and still more for
physiology or medicine for discoveries about the reactions and
catalysts involved. However, our knowledge about the innumerable
corresponding synthetic reactions which occur in all organisms,
was fragmentary. We had to resort to doubtful hypotheses; it was
usually assumed that the syntheses were a direct reversal of the
well-known breakdown reactions. The work of Leloir has indeed
revolutionized our thinking about these problems.
In 1949 Leloir published the discovery which became the
foundation for a remarkable development. He found that in a
certain reaction, which results in the transformation of one
sugar to another sugar, the participation of a so far
unidentified substance was essential. He isolated the substance
and determined its chemical nature. It turned out to be a
compound of an unknown type, containing a sugar moiety bound to a
nucleotide. Compounds of this type are now called sugar
nucleotides. Leloir established that the transformation reaction
does not occur in the sugars as such, but in the corresponding
sugar nucleotides. To put it simply, one may say, that the
linking with the nucleotide occasions an activation of the sugar
moiety which makes the reaction possible.
The remarkable aspect of the discovery was not the explanation of
a single reaction, but Leloir's quick comprehension that he had
found the key which would enable us to unravel an immense number
of metabolic reactions. He ingeniously realized that a path had
been opened to a field of research containing an accumulation of
unsolved problems. In the twenty years that have elapsed since
his initial discovery he has carried on his research in this
field in an admirable manner.
Other scientists were quick to grasp the fundamental importance
of Leloir's discovery; they realized that a vast field was now
accessible to worth-while scientific investigation and started
research along the path which he had opened. There can be no
doubt that few discoveries have made such an impact on
biochemical research as those of Leloir. All over the world, his
discoveries initiated research work, the volume of which has
grown over since. Leloir has been the forerunner and guide
throughout; he made all the primary discoveries which determined
the path and the objectives of the ensueing research work.
Leloir soon found that besides the sugar nucleotide first
isolated, several others of the same type occur in Nature, and
many have also been found by other research workers. Today more
than one hundred sugar nucleotides which are essential
participants in various reactions are known and well
characterized. Some of them have an action similar to that of the
first isolated, namely in the transformations of simple sugars to
other simple sugars or sugar derivatives.
Still more important was Leloir's discovery that other sugar
nucleotides have another action which occurs in the biological
synthesis of compounds which are composed of or contain simple
sugars or sugar derivatives. Leloir showed that all these
syntheses are essentially transfer reactions. Sugar moieties from
sugar nucleotides are transferred to accepting molecules which
thereby increase in size. Probably the most sensational discovery
made by Leloir was that the synthesis of the high-molecular
polysaccharides also functions in this manner. The first example
of the fundamental role of the sugar nucleotides in
polysaccharide biosynthesis was found by Leloir in 1959 in the
case of glycogen. It became clear that the polysaccharide
biosynthesis is not a reversal of the biological breakdown, as
had doubtfully been assumed earlier. On the contrary, Nature uses
different and quite independent processes for synthesis and
breakdown. Later on the same extremely important principle was
also shown to be valid with other groups of substances, for
instance with proteins and nucleic acids.
Through Leloir's work and the work of others, who were inspired
by his discoveries, knowledge of great significance has been
gained in wide and important sections of biochemistry, which were
previously obscure. It can be readily appreciated that Leloir's
work has also had far-reaching consequences in physiology and
medicine.
* The manuscript was read by Professor Arne Tiselius.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1970, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1971
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1970