I was born February 20, 1937 in
München as the first child of Sebastian and Helene Huber. My
father was cashier at a bank and my mother kept the house and
brought up the children, me and my younger sister, a difficult
task during the war, a continuous struggle for some milk and
bread and search for air-raid shelters. There was no Grammar
school in 1945 and 1946 and I entered the Humanistische
Karls-Gymnasium in München 1947 with intense teaching of
Latin and Greek, some natural science and a few optional monthly
hours of chemistry. I learned easily and had time to follow my
inclination for sports (light athletics and skiing) and
chemistry, which I taught myself by reading all textbooks I could
get.
I left the Gymnasium with the Abitur in 1956 and began to study
chemistry at the Technische Hochschule (later Technische
Universität) in München, where I also made the
Diploma in Chemistry in 1960. A stipend of the Bayerisches
Ministerium für Erziehung und Kultur and later of the
Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes helped to relieve financial
problems of my family and allowed me to study without delay. The
most impressive teachers I remember were W. Hieber and the
logical flow and impressive diction of his lectures in inorganic
chemistry; E.O. Fischer, the
young star in metalloorganic chemistry; F. Weygand and his deep
knowledge of organic chemistry; and G. Joos and G. Scheibe, the
physicist and physicochemist, respectively. I joined the
crystallographer W. Hoppe's laboratory for my diploma work on
crystallographic studies of the insect metamorphosis hormone
ecdysone. Part of these studies were made in Karlson's laboratory
at the Physiologisch-Chemisches Institut der Universität
München, where I found by a simple crystallograpic
experiment the molecular weight and probable steroid nature of
ecdysone which Hoppe and I later elucidated in atomic detail
after my thesis work which was on the crystal structure of a
diazo compound (1963). This discovery convinced me of the power
of crystallography and led me to continue in this field.
After a number of structure determinations of organic compounds
and methodical development of Patterson search techniques I began
in 1967, with Hoppe's and Braunitzer's support, crystallographic
work on the insect protein erythrocruorin (with Formanek). The
elucidation of this structure and its resemblance to the
mammalian globins as determined by Perutz and Kendrew in their
classical studies suggested for the first time a universal globin
fold. In 1971 the University of Basel offered me a chair of
structural biology at the Biozentrum and the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft the
position of a director at the Max-Planck-Institut
für Biochemie, which I accepted. I remained associated
with the Technische Universität München, where I became
Professor in 1976.
In 1970, I had begun work on the basic pancreatic trypsin
inhibitor which has later become the model compound for the
development of protein NMR, molecular dynamics, and experimental
folding studies in other laboratories. Work in the field of
proteolytic enzymes and their natural inhibitors has been
continued and extended to many different inhibitor classes,
proteases, their proenzymes, and complexes between them (with
Bode, Bartels, Chen, Fehlhammer, Deisenhofer, Loebermann, Kukla,
Papamokos, Ruhlmann, Steigemann, Toknoka, Wang, Walter, Weber,
Wei) including recently inhibitors of cysteine proteases (with
Musil, Bode, Engh) and other hydrolytic enzymes like a-amylase
(whith Pflugrath, Wiegand) and creatine hydrolase (with
Hoeffken). The potential of these systems for drug and protein
design has spurred our interest until today.
Early in the seventies I initiated work on immunoglobulins and
their fragments, which culminated in the elucidation of several
fragments, an intact antibody and its Fc fragment, the first
glycoprotein to be analysed in atomic detail (with Colman,
Deisenhofer, Epp, Marquart, Matsushima). Work was extended to
proteins interacting with immunoglobulins and to complement
proteins (with Paques, Jones, Deisenhofer). We also studied a
variety of enzymes leading to the elucidation of the structure
and the chemical nature of the selenium moiety in glutathione
peroxidase (with Ladenstein, Epp). We determined the structures
of citrate synthase in different states of ligation (with
Remington, Wiegand) and recently of a very large multienzyme
complex, heavy riboflavin synthase (with Ladenstein).
Early in the 1 980s we began with studies of proteins involved in
excitation energy and electron transfer, light-harvesting
proteins (with Schirmer, Bode), later bilin-binding protein, the
reaction centre (with Deisenhofer, Epp, Miki in collaboration
with Michel) and ascorbate oxidase (with Messerschmidt,
Ladenstein) which are described in my lecture.
Most of these structural studies were collaborative undertakings
with other laboratories, many of them from foreign
countries.
We had discovered that some of the proteins analysed showed
large-scale flexibility which was functionally significant. The
trypsinogen system was investigated (with Bode) in great detail
by low temperature crystallography, gamma-ray spectroscopy,
chemical modification, and molecular dynamics calculations.
However, it required some years before the scientific community
in general accepted that flexibility and disorder are very
relevant molecular properties also in other systems.
The development of methods of protein crystallography has been in
the focus of my laboratory's work from the beginning and led to
the development of refinement in protein crystallography (with
Steigemann, Deisenhofer, Remington), to the development of
Patterson search methods (with Bartels and Fehlhammer), to
methods and suites of computer programmes for intensity data
evaluation and absorption correction (FILME, with Bartels,
Bennett, Schwager), for protein crystallographic computing
(PROTEIN, with Steigemann), for computer graphics and electron
density interpretation and refinement (FRODO, Jones), and for
area detector data collection (MADNES, Pflugrath, Messerschmidt).
These methods and programmes are in use in many laboratories in
the world today.
I married Christa Essig in 1960. We have four children. The
eldest daughter (1961) and the two sons (1963, 1966) have been or
are studying economics. The youngest daughter (1976) shows some
interest in biology, a last hope.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1988, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1989
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1988