Presentation Speech by Professor E. Hammarsten, member of the Staff of Professors of the Royal Caroline Institute
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The Staff of the Karolinska Institutet has awarded this year's
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Professor Hans Adolf
Krebs and Professor Fritz Lipmann. This is an acknowledgement of
fast and significant contributions to the research into the
functions of the living cell. Extremely complicated molecules
take active part in the mechanisms of these cells. Their size can
be several thousand times that of the largest metal atoms, those
of the uranium group. Difficulties in understanding a machinery
of that type are immense, especially so long as these giant
molecules, the proteins, retain so many of the mysteries of an
unexplored world. These active proteins are called enzymes.
Certain specific smaller compounds which attach themselves to
these enzymes, and which awaken their activity are called
coenzymes.
This year's prizes which are presented here tonight were awarded
for the discoveries of essential processes connected with the
metabolism of the cell. It has long been known that the main
components of our foods (proteins, fats, and carbohydrates) are
transformed by the living cell into compounds having much smaller
molecules. It is a unique property of the cell that
simultaneously its own components undergo processes of breaking
down and building up which leads to the rejuvenation of the whole
organism. The breakdown products from both the food and the cell
components are used as building material for the working
machinery of the cell. The energy necessary for this construction
work is mainly derived from a transformation of a suitable amount
of material to carbonic acid and water. That all these processes
can take place simultaneously and in an extremely complex manner
is due to the very far-reaching structural specialization of the
microcosm of the cell.
Much had been known about all this before the advent of Hans
Adolf Krebs, but this knowledge was concerned only with details
and partial processes here and there. Nobody knew how these
isolated reactions were related to each other, and no one could
present a uniform picture of a logical overall reaction
mechanism.
It was Krebs who discovered how these individual reactions are
linked to each other in a cyclic process. He brought us a clear
understanding of the essential principle of how the released
energy is used for the building up processes which take place
within the cell.
This energy is liberated by the oxidation of a 2-carbon compound
to carbonic acid and water. This 2-carbon compound is derived
from the foodstuffs and is introduced into the Krebs cycle. The
nature of this compound and the mechanism of its incorporation
were discovered by Fritz Lipmann. But for the moment let us not
be concerned with this discovery since at that time it had not
yet been made. In the beginning Krebs was quite alone with his
idea, and when he first presented it, it was criticized by many.
But soon he found an even greater number of supporters who were
joined by his previous critics. Krebs' idea was that the
mysterious 2-carbon compound is added on to a known substance
with 4 carbon atoms yielding a 6-carbon compound. The 2-carbon
compound, bound in this way, is then degraded stepwise to
carbonic acid, water, and energy. When this degradation is
completed, the 4-carbon compound is again free to react with
another 2-carbon molecule, which starts a new period in the
oxidation cycle. Krebs could show that the 6-carbon compound
formed at the onset of this cycle is citric acid which contains
three carboxyl groups. The cycle is therefore also called the
tricarboxylic acid cycle.
The Krebs cycle explains two simultaneous processes: the
degradation reactions which yield energy, and the building-up
processes which use up energy. This is in keeping with the
above-named principle of a balance between these two kinds of
cell reactions. Several other scientists, notably the Americans
Werkman and Wood and the Spanish immigrant Ochoa, now working in New York, have
furnished proof of the reversibility of the Krebs cycle.
Out of the chaos of isolated reactions Krebs succeeded in
extracting the basic system for the essential pathway of
oxidation process within the cell. His penetrating intuition was
so clear and true and his grasp of the problem so keen from the
start that none of his original ideas had to be revised.
It is necessary to introduce compounds from the outside into the
Krebs cycle in order to keep it in operation, because
theoretically speaking the integral components are not used up in
the process. The principal incorporation takes place through
Lipmann's 2-carbon compound. It had been generally assumed that
this compound was closely related to acetic acid. It was known
that large amounts of acetic acid are formed in the metabolism of
the cell. This acid possesses two carbon atoms and could fit well
into the mechanism of the Krebs cycle. It seemed quite certain
that the 2-carbon compound was acetic acid, but that it was
active in some unknown form. Lipmann maintained for several years
that acetyl phosphate, a compound formed from acetic acid and
phosphoric acid was the active principle and he defended this
idea against a growing scepticism of his colleagues. Just when
most biochemists became convinced that this compound would not
fit into the mechanism of the Krebs cycle, and were ready to
abandon the whole idea, Lipmann announced his discovery of
coenzyme A. Now suddenly everything fitted perfectly - the last
notch of a combination lock fell into its place.
Coenzyme A is a compound with a rather small molecule, which,
when united with the enzyme-protein, acquires the property of
binding acetic acid. Acetic acid is normally quite unreactive but
when bound in this way it becomes labile and reactive and
represents the previously mystical 2-carbon compound which
combines with a 4-carbon compound to form citric acid. A new way
for the transmission of energy in the cell was demonstrated by
this discovery.
Recently the acetyl phosphate made a come-back, when Lipmann with
his usual keen insight showed that it is used as the active
2-carbon compound in certain bacteria. Far from feeling
triumphant Lipmann wrote in his otherwise very serious scientific
paper that he was quite happy about this finding.
That Lipmann's discovery has an even wider scope became clear
when he and others found that other acids than acetic acid are
activated by coenzyme A bound to other enzyme proteins.
Some of the coenzymes belong to the class of vitamins, Lipmann's
coenzyme for example is related to the B-vitamins, and vitamins
B1 and B2 are also active as coenzymes.
B2, a yellow vitamin, has been used by the Swedish
biochemist Hugo Theorell to
demonstrate that an active enzyme can be formed when a vitamin
becomes bound to a specific protein.
Doctor Krebs. The Staff of Karolinska
Institutet is pleased to reward your achievement when with
intuitive perception you were able to see in the chaotic and
fragmentary mass of known enzymatic processes the way, the
primary pathway, of combustion, and with consummate skill to
prove the reality of your vision.
This prize is in corroboration of the general agreement that you
have laid a foundation, which will last for all time and that we
have already witnessed the great development of constructive work
founded on your pioneer achievement.
On behalf of the Staff of Karolinska Institutet I ask you now to
receive the award from the hands of His Majesty the King.
Doctor Lipmann. You are a fighter. Your
opponent, and everybody knows you have only one, is an impersonal
opponent namely the complexity of biochemical processes.
Your keen wish to make things understandable and distinct has
been rewarded in the form of a clear-cut and far-reaching
discovery.
The importance of your discovery of coenzyme A was immediately
realized in biochemical circles but in spite of the tremendous
pace which was set in the purification and identification of the
new activator, you have remained the leader throughout.
You have removed an obstructive confusion by the clear
demonstration of a widespread reaction and have discovered
simultaneously a new way for the transmission of energy in the
cell.
On behalf of the Staff of Karolinska Institutet I ask you now to
receive the award from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1953, Editor Göran Liljestrand, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1954
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1953