Presentation Speech by Professor B. Uvnäs, member of the Staff of Professors of the Royal Caroline Institute
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
The work of Daniel Bovet should be considered in its context,
bearing in mind what had been found out about biological amines
between about 1920 and 1930. It had been thought that nerve
impulses reached peripheral organs rather in the way that signals
are transmitted along a telegraph wire to a receiver. However,
Otto Loewi and Henry Dale demonstrated, in work gaining
them a Nobel Prize, that nerve impulses released small amounts of
highly active substances at the nerve endings. Amines such as
acetylcholine, adrenaline, and, as Ulf von Euler has shown more recently in
Stockholm, noradrenaline, are substances of this type which
transmit the peripheral effects of nerve impulses. It was also
discovered that another amine, histamine, was released in much
larger quantities than normal in allergic reactions. The
well-known symptoms of such allergies as hay-fever, eczema,
asthma, etc., appear depending upon the site of histamine
production.
The discovery of the role played by biological amines, so far as
chemical transmitters were concerned, opened up new paths for
research. Pharmacologists and chemists could see the possibility
of producing substances whose actions would reproduce or inhibit
those of the biological amines. It was becoming possible, thanks
to these products, not only to interfere in experimental
physiological phenomena, but even in the pathological processes
of illness in clinical medicine. Daniel Bovet concentrated his
research on the problem of pharmacologically blocking the amines
mentioned above, and he succeeded in producing substances which
specifically inhibited their effects.
As early as 1937, Bovet and Staub succeeded in producing the
first antihistamine, thymoxidiethylamine, capable of preventing
anaphylactic shock in animals which, unneutralized, was fatal.
This first histamine antagonist was, it is true, too toxic to be
used clinically, but virtually every antihistamine that is used
throughout the world today to oppose symptoms of allergy is
derived from it.
From what we know at present, no antihistamines exist in Nature.
But, on the other hand, there do exist substances which can
prevent nerve impulses taking effect. Venetian ladies of the
sixteenth century knew they could make themselves more seductive
by bathing their eyes with a lotion of belladonna. The
characteristic dilation of the pupil is produced by the alkaloid
of belladonna, atropine, which blocks the effects of
acetylcholine released at nerve endings in the musculature of the
iris. The nerve impulses lose their effect and the pupil is
paralysed. In the same era the South American Indians knew a
vegetable preparation, curare, which they used - if I dare
express myself thus - on slightly different hunting grounds.
Curare is a poison which suited the use they made of it - on the
tip of an arrow - extremely well. It paralyses its prey by
blocking, in the way that atropine does, the transmitter
substance - here again acetylcholine - which links the motor
nerve to the muscle fibres. Given orally, curare is completely
inactive. Nature has equally produced substances which can
inhibit the effects of adrenaline and noradrenaline, these two
amines which are released at the nerve endings of sympathetic
fibres. The most important of these so-called sympathicolytic
substances are the alkaloids which are found in ergot.
The alkaloids of ergot, as well as those of curare, have
extremely complicated chemical structures and do not lend
themselves to synthesis. They are little used for experiment and
still less used in the field of clinical medicine on account of
their toxicity and the unpredictable character of their
effects.
For a number of years, Bovet and his co-workers studied in
animals the relationships between chemical structure and
biological effect, as could be observed in the alkaloids of
curare and ergot. Proceeding by systematic variations and
successive simplifications of chemical structure, work which
involved the elaboration of new methods of biological testing and
the production of hundreds of new synthetic chemical compounds,
they succeeded, by degrees, in obtaining simple chemical
compounds which proved themselves, from the point of view of
specificity and the absence of undesirable side-effects, much
more useful than naturally occurring substances.
The interest which the appearance of products capable of
paralysing muscle presents in practical medicine is bound to the
evolution of modern surgery, which has made it possible to
perform more and more complicated surgical procedures. Operations
of this type often require complete muscular relaxation.
Anaesthesia must therefore be deep and long, and for this reason
it carries risks which can be more dangerous than the surgery
itself. We owe to Bovet's research the general muscle relaxants
which we use today. We can, in this way, use a light level of
anaesthetic and reduce the hazards to which the patient is
subjected. Sympatholytic compounds have not yet found any
application in general medicine. The future will tell whether the
hopes placed in them will be fulfilled and whether they will be
of value in the treatment of hypertension and other vascular
conditions for which we think a reduction in nervous control
would be desirable.
Apart from the importance of Bovet's work in experimental
neuropharmacology, his observations have exerted a very
stimulating influence in one rapidly growing branch of
pharmacology: I speak of psychopharmacology. Biological amines
are the transmitters of nerve impulses in the different tracts of
the brain, just as they are the chemical agents which link nerve
fibres to peripheral organs. In other words, it should be
possible to find drugs which specifically affect brain function.
Already, in fact, we posses a number of compounds of this type.
Lysergic acid is one of the active components of the ergot
alkaloids. A compound closely related to lysergic acid, namely
lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), has a really dramatic effect on
mental activity, as one Swiss chemist quite accidently verified.
The absorption of a fraction of a milligram of this compound is
enough to produce gross distortion of both visual and auditory
perception, and mental states resembling those seen in the acute
psychoses and certain other mental illnesses. It is fascinating,
and at the same time frightening, to know that we can, with
minute quantities of simple chemicals, modify the mental state,
the soul of a human being. But there is another side to this
picture. It allows us to cherish the well-founded hope that in
the near future we shall have effective means at our disposal for
fighting mental illness which at present is one of the most
terrible scourges of mankind.
Professor Bovet. The Caroline Institute has
conferred on you this year's Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine for your work in blocking by pharmacological means the
effects of the biologically active amines. We add to our
congratulations our warmest wishes for the future success of the
work in the psychopharmacological field now being carried out in
your laboratory.
I ask you now, Professor, to accept the prize which is your due,
from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1957