Presentation Speech by Professor G. Liljestrand, member of the Staff of Professors of the Royal Caroline Institute, on December 10, 1929
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
That the fruits of civilization are not solely beneficial is
shown by, inter alia, the history of the art of medicine.
Not a few illnesses and diseases follow close on the heels of,
and are more or less directly caused by, civilization. This is
the case with the widespread disease beriberi, first described
more than 1,300 years ago from that ancient seat of civilization,
China. In modern times, however, it was not until towards the end
of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century that the
disease attracted more general attention. Subsequently it has, on
different occasions and with varying degrees of violence, made
its appearance in all five continents, but more particularly its
haunts have been in Eastern and South-Eastern Asia. At times the
disease has been a serious scourge there. Thus in 1871 and 1879,
Tokio was visited by widespread epidemics, and during the
Russo-Japanese War it is said that not less than one-sixth of the
Japanese army was struck down.
Beriberi shows itself in paralysis accompanied by disturbances in
the sensibility and atrophy of the muscles, besides symptoms from
the heart and blood vessels, inter alia, tiredness and
oedema. Decided lesions have been shown in the peripheral nerves
which seem to explain the manifestations of the disease.
Mortality has varied considerably, from one or two per cent to 80
per cent in certain epidemics.
A number of circumstances indicated a connection between food and
beriberi: for example, it was suggested that the cause might be
traced to bad rice or insufficiency in the food of proteins or
fat.
The severe ravages of beriberi in the Dutch Indies led the Dutch
Government to appoint a special commission to study the disease
on the spot. At the time, bacteriology was in its hey-day, and it
was then but natural that bacteria should be sought as the cause
of the disease, and indeed it was thought that success had been
attained. The researches were continued in Java by one of the
commission's coadjutors, the Dutch doctor Christiaan Eijkman. As
has so often been the case during the development of science, a
chance observation proved to be of decisive importance. Eijkman
observed a peculiar sickness among the hens belonging to the
laboratory. They were attacked by an upward-moving paralysis,
they began to walk unsteadily, found difficulty in perching, and
later lay down on their sides. The issue of the disease was fatal
unless they were specially treated. It has been said that the
secret of success is to be prepared for one's opportunity when it
presents itself, and indubitably Eijkman was prepared in an
eminent degree. With his attention focussed on beriberi, he
immediately found a striking similarity between that disease and
the sickness that had attacked the hens. He also observed changes
in numerous nerves similar to those met with in the case of
beriberi. In common with beriberi, this ailment of the hens was
to be described as a polyneuritis. In vain, however, did Eijkman
try to establish micro-organisms as the cause of the
disease.
On the other hand, he succeeded in establishing the fact that the
condition of the hens was connected with a change in their food,
in that for some time before they were attacked they had been
given boiled polished rice instead of the usual raw husked rice.
Direct experiments proved incontestably that the polyneuritis of
the hens was caused by the consumption of rice that by so-called
«polishing» had been deprived of the outer husk.
Eijkman found that the same disease presented itself when the
hens were fed exclusively on a number of other starch-rich
products, such as sago and tapioca. He also proved that the
disease could be checked by the addition to the food of rice
bran, that is to say, the parts of the rice that had been removed
by polishing, and he found that the protective constituent of the
bran was soluble in water and alcohol.
Eijkman's work led Vorderman to carry out investigations on
prisoners in the Dutch Indies (where the prisoner's food was
prepared in different ways according to the varying customs of
the inhabitants), with a view to discovering whether beriberi in
man was connected with the nature of the rice food they consumed.
It proved that in the prisons where the inmates were fed on
polished rice, beriberi was about 300 times as prevalent as in
the prisons where unpolished rice was used.
When making investigations to explain the results reached,
Eijkman considered that protein or salt hunger could not be the
cause of the disease. But he indicated that the protective
property of the rice bran might possibly be connected with the
introduction of some particular protein or some special salt. At
the time it might have been readily imagined that the
polyneuritis in the hens and beriberi were due to some poison,
and Eijkman set this up as a working hypothesis, though his
attempts to establish the poison were in vain. In his view,
however, such a poison was formed, but it was rendered innocuous
by the protective substance in the bran. It was only Eijkman's
successor in Java, Grijns, who made it clear that the substance
in question was used directly in the body, and that our usual
food, in addition to the previously known constituents, must
contain certain other substances, if health is to be preserved.
Funk introduced the designation vitamins for these
substances, and since then the particular substance that serves
as a protection against polyneuritis has been called the
«antineuritic» vitamin.
It might have been expected that Eijkman's discovery would lead
to an immediate and decided decline in beriberi - perhaps to the
disappearance of the disease. But this was by no means the case,
and not even in the Dutch Indies, where Eijkman and Grijns had
worked, were the results particularly brilliant. The reasons for
this were several: the reluctance of the inhabitants to
substitute the less appetizing unpolished for polished rice, the
opinion that polyneuritis in birds was not a similar condition to
beriberi in man, and an inadequate appreciation of Eijkman's
work. As a result of numerous experiments by different
investigators on animals and human beings, who offered themselves
for experimental work, it has gradually become clear that
beriberi is a disease for the appearance of which lack of the
vitamin found in rice bran - but also other circumstances - is of
decisive importance. These experiences, in addition to successful
experiments made in various places on the basis of Eijkman's
observations, especially in British India, have gradually led to
a general adoption of Eijkman's views. The successful attempts to
combat beriberi which are now proceeding are the fruits of
Eijkman's labours.
It was the analysis of the nature of the
food used in cases of polyneuritis in hens that led Eijkman to
his discovery. As a rule, analysis and synthesis complete each
other, and indeed the employment of both these avenues of
approach has been of decisive importance also for the development
of the science of vitamins.
Although a number of experiments carried out about 50 years ago
supported the assumption that, if our food is to have its full
value, it must contain something more than the long-known basic
constituents - proteins, fat, carbohydrates, water, and salts -
yet it is not until our own days that complete certainty has been
reached. One line of development has been sketched above. But
numerous investigations have also been carried out by different
experimentors with a view to testing the value of foods composed
exclusively of the above-mentioned constituents in pure form.
Sometimes it has proved to be a matter of some difficulty to get
young animals to grow on such foods. One explanation put forward
for this was the monotony of the food, and another was that the
excessive purity resulted in the absence of certain substances
giving the food taste which are necessary for appetite, and which
must be present if the food is to be taken in sufficient amount.
From other quarters, however, it was reported that even from the
pure constituents, a food had been successfully produced which
led to growth in the young organism.
When Hopkins joined the numbers of those who were trying to find
a solution to this problem, he had the advantage of a
far-reaching experience within similar fields of research, for he
had done a great deal of detailed work on the presentation in
pure form of certain proteins, and in connection therewith he had
discovered the amino acid tryptophane as an element in certain
proteins. As early as 1906 he had carried out careful feeding
experiments on mice with different proteins, and by means of
regular weighings it was observed whether the food was sufficient
or not. It appeared from these experiments that the animal
organism cannot itself build up tryptophane - proteins which do
not contain it are not sufficient for the needs of the body. The
simple methods employed by Hopkins came to play an important role
later on.
When Hopkins continued his experiments, he fed young rats on a
basic diet which, in addition to the necessary salts, contained a
carefully purified mixture of lard, starch, and casein, i.e. the
protein that is most abundantly found in milk. After some time
the animals ceased to grow, which showed the insufficiency of
this basic food in itself. By various experiments, however,
Hopkins demonstrated that it was only necessary to add a very
small daily amount of milk - two to three cubic centimeters for
each animal - for growth to recommence. This amount of milk only
corresponded to one or two per cent of the energy-content of the
food, so that in this respect the addition of milk was
insignificant. It was indeed found that incompletely purified
casein, e.g. the ordinary casein of commerce, owing to the slight
quantities of active substances present, was sufficient, with the
other basic food, to maintain growth, even though it was
considerably delayed. It was evident, as Hopkins was able to show
more explicitly, that here was to some extent the explanation of
the older and conflicting results.
Hopkins showed that there was a sufficiency of food consumed
without the added milk, but it could be fully utilized by the
body only when the growth-promoting influence of the milk was
present. This effect was found not to be connected with any of
the known constituent parts of milk. It was found also with yeast
and the green parts of plants.
Hopkins communicated certain of his main results - but in an
extremely brief form - as early as in 1906, and he returned to
the subject in 1909 in a series of lectures, but it was not until
three years later that his work was published in its entirety. By
then Stepp had given accounts of experiments which, though they
certainly seem less capable of one definite interpretation than
those of Hopkins, yet point in the same direction, and the ground
was also in other respects prepared, so that Hopkins' work was a
great incentive to continued experiments in the young science of
vitamins. Chiefly by American investigations it was shown that
there are at least two vitamins necessary for growth, one soluble
in fat, the other in water. It is still an open question whether
the latter is identical with the antineuritic vitamin.
Just as at one time the newly acquired
knowledge of bacteria as causes of illness opened the door to an
entirely new province of research of extraordinary importance, so
now the discovery of vitamins - even though to a lesser degree -
has opened up new vistas to medicine, and we have advanced nearer
to the understanding of numerous obscure maladies. Under the
influence of Eijkman's discovery, Holst, with Frölich,
exposed the nature and character of scurvy. Above all by the
efforts of Hopkins' pupil Mellanby, it was found that rachitis
was an illness due to lack of certain substances, and others have
shown similar conditions for a large number of other maladies,
the last one being pellagra, the similarity in principle of which
to beriberi was already indicated by Eijkman in his classic
work.
At the same time, extensive and important contributions have been
made to the question of the nature of the physiological processes
which are affected by vitamins.
Thus the discovery of vitamins, which is this year rewarded with
the Nobel Prize, implies an advance of extraordinary
significance, but there is still much of importance to be
discovered that can at present be but dimly discerned or
suspected.
Your Excellency, Baron Sweerts de Landas
Wyborgh, Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins. Many years have passed,
since Eijkman found the antineuritic principle in food, but the
great importance of this work has been appreciated but slowly.
Today, however, the outstanding significance of the discovery is
universally acknowledged not only for our understanding and our
attempt to combat beriberi, but also because it has indicated a
way of investigating and controlling many other deficiency
diseases.
You, Sir Frederick, have demonstrated the physiological necessity
of the vitamins for normal metabolism and growth, thus very
considerably extending our knowledge of the importance of
vitamins for life processes as a whole.
The discoveries of the antineuritic and the growth-promoting
vitamins, for which the Caroline Institute has awarded the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine this year, are foundation stones
of the science of vitamins. Great as has been the progress in
this field, yet we may still hope to reap rich harvests in the
future.
On behalf of the Caroline Institute I express its hearty
congratulations to the prizemen, and I beg Your Excellency to
convey to your famous countryman its felicitations. With these
words I have the great honour of asking you to accept the Nobel
Prize for Physiology or Medicine from the hands of His Majesty
the King.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1929, Editor Carl Gustaf Santesson, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1930
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1929