Presentation Speech by Professor R. Granit, member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine of the Royal Caroline Institute
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
This year's Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine concerns the
basic processes underlying the nervous mechanisms of control and
the communication between nerve cells. When physiologists, in the
manner of physicists and chemists, have attempted to define
unitary events, they have encountered the nerve cell and the
nerve fibre. The impulse in the fibre is an electrical pulse
which lasts 1/1000 second. In series of such pulses the nerve
cells communicate with each other and give orders to muscles and
glands in the body. The results of the Nobel Laureates deal with
the nature of the nerve impulse itself and with the electrical
changes that it causes at the bodies of nerve cells, in
particular the two fundamental events called excitation and
inhibition respectively. Their methods are based on electronics.
The electrical processes have been recorded with microelectrodes,
amplified about a million times, and then displayed on the screen
of a cathode ray tube.
The new developments began with an experiment in 1939 by Hodgkin
and Huxley. This was intended to check the classical theory of
Bernstein according to which the nerve impulse is a travelling
permeability leak shunting inside to outside across the fibre
membrane. Under these circumstances the impulse at its best could
only develop an amount of potential change corresponding to that
of the inside of the fibre, as measured across its membrane,
provided that this potential actually could be recorded between
inside and outside of the fibre. They succeeded in carrying out
this experiment with the squid giant nerve fibre into which it
was possible to insert an electrode. The impulse was found to
deliver an amount of potential change which exceeded by one third
that of the inside which is determined by a potassium
concentration battery.
After the second World War Hodgkin and Huxley returned to their
unexpected result and decided to test a theory which in 1904 had
been propounded by Ernest Overton, later professor in
pharmacology at Lund. His theory suggested that the nerve impulse
involved an exchange between sodium ions from the outside and
potassium ions from the inside of the fibre.
School physics has taught us, that current intensity, resistance
and potential are related to each other in the manner defined by
Ohm's simple law. This is an equation in
which three quantities are unknown and so the experimental
solution requires knowledge of two of them in order to calculate
the third. To this end Hodgkin and Huxley introduced two
electrodes into the giant nerve fibre of the squid. One served to
clamp the voltage in predetermined steps, the other to measure
the current produced during activity. Calculation gave the third
quantity, the resistance of the membrane, whose inverse value,
the permeability or conductance, was the one which the
experiments were designed to measure.
When next the experiment was carried out with the excised nerve
in solutions of different ionic concentrations, it was found that
the ionic current during impulse activity depended upon two
transient and successive changes of permeability both of which
were selective. The rising phase of the impulse corresponded to a
sodium permeability which after about half a millisecond was
replaced by a potassium permeability in the falling phase. During
the rising phase positive sodium ions flowed into the nerve from
the outside and produced the overshoot of potential by which the
impulse exceeded that of the nerve's potassium battery. In the
falling phase potassium ions from the inside migrated outwards.
Both phases were measured quantitatively and described in a
formula which, inserted in a computer, made it possible to
predict a number of known and unknown fundamental attributes of
excitability, inasmuch as these depend upon the ionic events
discovered.
Hodgkin and Huxley's ionic theory of the nerve impulse embodies
principles, applicable also to the impulses in muscles, including
the electrocardiogram of the heart muscle, a fact of clinical
significance. It has likewise proved to be valid for vertebrate
nerve fibres, as demonstrated by Dr. Bernhard Frankenhaeuser of
the Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology in Stockholm. Their
discovery is a milestone on the road towards the understanding of
the nature of excitability.
Sir John Eccles' discoveries concern the electrical changes which
the nerve impulses elicit when they reach another nerve cell. In
this experiment the microelectrode, with a tip of less than
1/1,000 mm, is placed, for instance, in a so-called motoneurone
in the spinal cord. These motor cells have a diameter between 40
and 60 thousandth of a mm. The arriving impulse produces
excitation or inhibition in the motor cell, because the terminals
of the nerve fibre are connected to excitatory or inhibitory
chemical mechanisms at the cell membrane. These are called
synaptic mechanisms because the points of contact are known as
synapses, a term introduced by Sherrington. There are two kinds of
synapses, one excitatory, the other inhibitory. If the arriving
impulse is connected to excitatory synapses the response of the
cell is yes, i. e. excitability increases, vice
versa the inhibitory synapses make the cell respond with a
no, a diminution of excitability. Eccles has shown how
excitation and inhibition are expressed by changes of membrane
potential.
When the response is sufficiently strong to cause excitation, the
membrane potential decreases until a value is reached at which
the cell fires off an impulse, the sodium impulse we have spoken
of. This impulse travels through the nerve fibre of the cell and
in our example causes contraction in a muscle. Obviously a cell
may also send impulses to another cell at whose membrane the
synaptic processes repeat themselves with plus or minus sign, as
the case may be.
A cell engaged in activity may be influenced by impulses reaching
inhibitory synapses. In this case the membrane potential
increases and, as a consequence, the impulse discharge is
inhibited. Thus excitation and inhibition correspond to ionic
currents which push the membrane potential in opposite
directions.
The nerve cells are provided with thousands of synapses which
correspond to terminals of fibres originating in sense organs or
other nerve cells. The sum total of synaptic processes determines
the state of balance between excitation and inhibition in which
the integrated messages of nerve cells find expression and the
code of impulses its interpretation.
Sir John, Professor Hodgkin, Professor
Huxley. The visual and acoustic impressions we have of this
festive occasion with its great traditions in the history of
science, our very thinking itself, our talk, our reading, are
founded on processes within the central nervous system, that is,
on the language of electrical nerve impulses and on the responses
of nerve cells engaged in replying to it at synapses. By
elucidating the nature of the unitary electrical events in the
peripheral and central nervous system you have brought
understanding of nervous action to a level of clarity which your
contemporaries did not expect to witness in their life
time.
It is with great pleasure and satisfaction that I now
congratulate you on behalf of the Royal Caroline Institute.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1963