I was born in Ludwigsburg,
Württemberg, in the southwestern part of the Federal
Republic of Germany on July 18, 1948, as the elder son of Karl
and Frieda Michel. My ancestors lived in that area for
generations, mainly as farmers. There the inherited land is
equally divided among sisters and brothers, and not enough land
was left for one family's living during my grandparents'
generation. During the day my father worked in a factory as a
joiner, my mother at home as a dressmaker, in the evenings and on
Saturdays care had to be taken of the huge gardens.
As a child I liked to play outside, to stroll through the fields,
and I was an active member of the local children's gang,
frequently being chased by field guards and building supervisors.
Nevertheless, my performance at school was very good, and mainly
due to the influence of my mother I was allowed to attend high
school. At age eleven I became a member of the circulating
library of my home town. From there on I was rarely seen outside,
but was reading two to four books per week, the subjects ranging
from archaeology over ethnology and geography to zoology.
Needless to say that I did not do much homework. At school my
favorite subjects were history, biology, chemistry and physics.
Especially the teaching in physics was excellent. Most of my
understanding of it I got at high school, not at the
university.
In parallel, my interest in molecular biology rose. In 1969 -
after the obligatory military service - I applied to study
biochemistry at the University of Tübingen. At that time
Tübingen was the only place in Germany, where one could
study biochemistry from the first year, and I was happy to be
accepted. Studying biochemistry meant that one had to take part
in nearly the same amount of lectures and courses as chemistry
students in addition to numerous lectures and courses in biology.
The atmosphere between senior teachers and students was
impersonal, and the only time I talked to the full professor of
biochemistry was during the final examination. However, the
possibility existed to work for one year in the various
biochemistry labs at the University of Munich and the
Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie instead of attending lab
courses in Tübingen. I took that chance in 1972/1973, and at
the end I was convinced that academic research was what I wanted
to do.
After the examination in Tübingen in 1974 I did the
experimental part of my biochemistry diploma in Dieter
Oesterhelt's lab at the Friedrich Miescher-Laboratorium of the
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft in Tübingen. In cooperation with
Walter Stockenius, Dieter Oesterhelt had discovered
bacteriorhodopsin in halobacteria and later proposed that it acts
as a lightdriven proton pump in the framework of Peter Mitchell's
chemiosmotic theory. During my diploma work I characterized the
ATPase-activity of halobacteria. In 1975, Dieter Oesterhelt moved
to Würzburg. I joined him, and as a thesis I correlated the
intracellular levels of adenosine di- and triphosphate with the
electrochemical proton gradient across the halobacterial cell
membrane. Having received the doctorate in June 1977 I tried to
fuse delipidated bacteriorhodopsin with bacterial vesicles in
order to achieve light-driven amino acid uptake. Upon storage in
the freezer the delipidated bacteriorhodopsin yielded solid,
glass-like aggregates. On the basis of this observation I was
convinced that it should be possible to crystallize membrane
proteins like bacteriorhodopsin, which was considered to be
impossible at that time. With Oesterhelt's help I started the
experiments, and already four weeks later we obtained a new
two-dimensional membrane crystal of bacteriorhodopsin. It was not
the three-dimensional crystal we wanted, but allowed me to travel
to the MRC at Cambridge, England, and to do electron
microscopical studies together with Richard Henderson. Back in
Würzburg, we observed the first real three-dimensional
crystals of bacteriorhodopsin in April 1979. The success led me
to cancel my plans to do post-doctoral studies with Susumu Ohno,
Duarte, California, on sexual differentiation in mammals. Instead
of this, I moved with Dieter Oesterhelt again, this time to the
Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie at Martinsried near
Munich, where he became a department head and director. Before
moving to Munich, Ilona Leger became my wife. Her understanding
and patience helped me a lot.
A promising aspect of the move to Martinsried was the possibility
of a cooperation with Robert Huber and colleagues, who at the
Max-PlanckInstitut had established a very productive department
for X-ray crystallographic protein structure analysis. Our
bacteriorhodopsin crystals were found to diffract X-rays, but to
be too small and too disordered for a structural analysis. We
tried to improve size and quality of the crystals. Since all the
X-ray crystallographers had beautifully diffracting crystals of
soluble proteins, I, understandably, had very limited access to
the X-ray equipment at Martinsried. As a consequence, I spent
four months at the MRC in Cambridge, England, together with
Richard Henderson in 1980, in order to perform X-ray experiments.
This period was essential for improving the crystallization
method. After my return Dieter Oesterhelt decided to buy an X-ray
generator for the ongoing work with bacteriorhodopsin. The
generator was installed in Robert Huber's department and
guaranteed us continued access to the equipment, and the know
how, of the X-ray crystallographers. Later on, I used this
generator for the work with the reaction centres.
Frustrated from the lack of the final success with
bacteriorhodopsin, I tried to crystallize several other membrane
proteins, mainly photosynthetic ones. After developing a new
isolation procedure I obtained the first crystals of the
photosynthetic reaction centre from the purple bacterium
Rhodopseudomonas viridis at the end of July 1981. One week later
our daughter Andrea was born. During September 1981 the first
reaction centre crystal was X-rayed by Wolfram Bode and myself,
and turned out to be of excellent quality. Therefore 1981 was the
happiest and most successful year of my life.
Dieter Oesterhelt immediately agreed that the reaction centre
should be a project of the young people. In February 1982, I
started the data collection for the X-ray structure analysis. In
April or May I gave a seminar in Robert Huber's department and
asked officially for collaboration. After some internal
discussions Robert Huber agreed that Johann ("Hans") Deisenhofer,
who was the partner of my choice, should take part in the
reaction centre project. During the work Hans and I became the
best friends. In August 1982, Hans and Kunio Miki, a Japanese
post-doctoral research associate in Robert Huber's department,
started to evaluate the pile of X-ray films. I continued with the
experimental work, occasionally helped by Robert Huber, who
showed me how the diffraction pattern of a promising derivative
should look like. Not only the X-ray work, but also the entire
biochemical characterization and sequence determination had to be
done. After the preliminary tracing of the peptide chains by
Johann Deisenhofer, the sequence determination, which was
performed by Karl A. Weyer, Heidi Gruenberg and myself with
Dieter Oesterhelt's support and help, turned out to be the bottle
neck for our progress. During that period of heavy work our son
Robert Joachim was born in 1984.
As one of the results of the success I received many offers. I
accepted the one to become a department head and director at the
Max-Planck-Institut für Biophysik in Frankfurt/Main, West
Germany, where I am since October 1987.
For the success with the crystallization of membrane proteins and
the elucidation of the three-dimensional structure of the
photosynthetic reaction centre from the purple bacterium
Rhodopseudomonas viridis I received various prizes and
awards. Among these are the Biophysics Prize of the American
Physical Society (together with d. Deisenhofer), the
"Chemiedozentenstipendium" of the "Fonds der Chemischen
Industrie", the "Otto Klung-Preis" for chemistry, the
Leibniz-Preis of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the
"Otto-Bayer-Preis" (together with J. Deisenhofer) and now the
Nobel Prize (together with J. Deisenhofer and R. Huber).
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1981-1990, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Bo G. Malmström, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1992
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1988