Presentation Speech by Professor J.E. Johansson, Chairman of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine of the Royal Caroline Institute, on December 10, 1923*
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The object of physiology is to endeavour to recognize in the
vital processes well-known physical and chemical processes.
Accordingly it has to give answers to such questions as these:
what is it that takes place in a muscle that contracts, in a
gland that emits a secretion, in a nerve when it transmits an
impulse? In former times these processes were explained as being
the work of what were called «life spirits» - beings
who in their mode of existence possessed an unmistakable
resemblance to the person who spoke of them. If the muscles of a
recently killed animal were seen to twitch when cut or pierced,
this was explained by saying that the life spirits had been
irritated. From this way of looking at things there still remains
the expression «irritation», which we use to denote the
starting - or, as we also put it, the liberation - of an active
process in an organ. It is a long time, however, since we learnt
to regard living organs, muscles, nerves, etc., as mechanisms;
and the expression «muscular machine» will probably not
strike any educated person in our days as being strange or
offensive.
In order to render clear the working of a mechanism it is
customary to give a «simplified model» of it. A
schematic drawing or an imaginary model may perform the same
service, and is at any rate cheaper. The first model that was
made of muscular mechanism had the steam-engine as its prototype.
Very soon, however, it was perceived that the adoption of an
engine of this type presupposes the existence of substances in
the muscular fibres capable of sustaining temperatures far
exceeding 100°C. The efficiency of muscular work can in fact
amount to 20-30%; and such values cannot be obtained by a
heat-engine unless the temperature in certain parts of the engine
is raised to a considerable height. Hence the muscular machine
cannot be referred to that group of motors that transform heat
into mechanical work and that are based on the equalization of
different temperatures. Theoretically, however, differences in
osmotic pressure, surface tension, electrical potential, and so
on, offer the same possibility of developing work; and
consequently any chemical process whatever that takes place
«spontaneously» and that gives rise to such differences
in «potential», might be employed in a model of a
muscular machine. Thus there is no lack of material for the
construction of such a model. The difficulty is to select. In
this case there was also a further difficulty, namely that of
being able to emancipate oneself, in the design of such a model,
from the old and discarded model of a heat-engine. One need not
be a physiologist to recognize that muscular activity is
essentially bound up with the development of heat, or even
with combustion. Now as it is impossible to regard the
muscle as a heat-engine, how is it possible to fit these
phenomena into the course of action?
This problem has been successfully solved by the two
investigators to each of whom the Professorial Staff of the
Caroline Institute has this year resolved to award half of the
Nobel Prize for 1922 in Physiology or Medicine, namely Professors
Archibald Vivian Hill of London and Otto Meyerhof of Kiel. These two men have each
worked independently and to a large extent with different
methods. Hill has analysed, by means of an extremely elegant
thermoelectrical method, the time relations of the heat
production of the muscle; and Meyerhof has investigated by
chemical methods the oxygen consumption by the muscle and the
conversion of carbohydrates and lactic acid in the muscle. Both
have made use of the same kind of experimental material, namely
the surviving muscle excised from a frog - in fact, the classical
frog muscle preparation.
Such a preparation remains alive for several hours, or even days.
A suitable stimulus liberates a contraction or develops a state
of tension, both of short duration. The twitch takes only one or
two tenths of a second. If the stimulus be repeated, the muscle
makes a new twitch, apparently resembling the preceding one; and
if the muscle is attached to a suitable connecting lever, the
several twitches give the same effect as the strokes of a piston
in a steam-engine. What was more natural than to regard the
muscular twitch as the expression of a circular process in the
muscular elements? This process makes itself known in another way
also, namely in the form of a development of heat in the muscle
preparation. The amount of heat is very insignificant. It is
measured in millionths of the usual unit of heat and is recorded
in a thermoelectrical way in the form of readings on a
galvanometer. Armed with technical resources for observing both
the mechanical process and the development of heat in the twitch
of an isolated muscle, investigators tried to penetrate more
deeply into the muscular process proper. Our countryman Blix
showed that everything that impedes the contraction of a muscle
during the twitch - that is to say, impedes the diminution of
surface of the muscular elements - increases the formation of
heat, and from this concluded that the process sought is
localized to the surface of certain structural elements which,
owing to changed conditions in surface tension, acquire a
tendency to pass from an ellipsoidical to a more spherical form.
If the load of the muscle gives way to the tension thus created,
external work is done. Hence the muscle is mainly to be regarded
as a machine that converts chemical energy into tension
energy.
In the first experiments that Hill carried out on this subject in
1910 he made use of a thermo-galvanometer designed by Blix. Here
he noticed that the reading not only gives the total amount of
heat developed, but also is to some extent affected by the period
of time taken in the development of heat. He was able to
distinguish between an «initial» and a
«delayed» development of heat. A subsequent work
contained the starting-point for a new method of investigation,
which made it possible to trace the development of heat in
muscular movements in their various stages. This technique may be
described as having been completely developed by 1920; but some
of the results that I shall mention had been obtained as early as
1913, that is to say before the outbreak of the World War.
The development of heat in the contraction of the muscle - which
to preceding investigators appeared to be «one and
indivisible», that is to say, was lumped together as a
single phenomenon - can be divided by Hill's method into
several periods, the last of which comes long after the
end of the mechanical process, that of the twitch. To this
must be added the fact that this delayed development of heat
entirely fails to appear if the supply of oxygen to the muscle
be cut off, while the development of heat during the
actual twitch - tension and relaxation - is completely
independent of the presence of oxygen. The process of
combustion, which it had been customary to connect immediately
with the contraction of the muscle, does not actually take place
until afterwards. In the experimental arrangements with which we
are now dealing (isometrical work) the development of heat during
the actual twitch also includes the amount of energy which under
other circumstances appears as external work.
Hill's discovery has had a veritably revolutionizing effect as
regards the conception of the muscular process. The ordinary view
of this process as divided into two phases, tension and
relaxation, can, it is true, be retained with regard to the
mechanical process, but with regard to the chemical process
another division must be adopted - the working phase
proper, independent of the supply of oxygen and corresponding
to the whole of the mechanical process, and following it an
oxidative phase of recovery. If previously in their
speculations as to the muscular process physiologists had mainly
shown an interest in the actual twitch, investigations now became
directed towards the muscle in rest and especially the muscle
after preceding exhaustion. Chemical considerations now attracted
attention as well as the physical ones.
The earliest known chemical process in the muscle is the
formation of lactic acid. This is mentioned as early as 1859 by
Du Bois-Reymond. He had found that an excised muscle becomes acid
on repeated stimulation even when the rigor mortis sets in. He
supposed the cause of this to be the formation of lactic acid -
owing, it is stated, to a communication from Berzelius, who had
found great quantities of that acid in the flesh of a deer that
had been killed in the chase. Since that time lactic acid has
played a very important part in discussions as to rigor mortis
and the fatigue of the muscle. Some years before Hill began his
investigations, two of his countrymen, Fletcher and Hopkins, had shown that the excised
muscle not only forms but also converts lactic
acid, this depending on whether the muscle is shut off from
oxygen or whether oxygen is supplied to it. Some observations
also suggested that when the lactic acid disappears from the
muscle, only part of it is burnt up, while the rest is
re-transformed into the mother substance of lactic acid. In
consequence of this there was reason to surmise that the part
played by lactic acid in the muscles is not completely
represented by such expressions as «by-product of the
metabolism», «fatigue substance», «cause of
rigor mortis», etc. In this connection Hill proposed that
lactic acid should be included as a part of the actual muscle
machine.
The formation of lactic acid in the muscle, according to Fletcher
and Hopkins, and this development of heat in the muscle during
its working phase, according to Hill, exhibit the striking
accordance that they take place independent of the oxygen supply.
According to Blix, the twitch came about due to the fact that
along the surface of certain structural elements there suddenly
appears some substance, the nature of which is not stated. If we
suppose this substance to be lactic acid - formed either directly
or with some intermediate stage from the muscles' well-known
store of glycogen - we have a model which combines in itself the
most valuable contributions of the investigations of the last few
decades on this question. We make the stage of recovery,
accompanied by the supply of oxygen, follow the working phase
together with Hill's delayed development of heat and Fletcher's
conversion of lactic acid. The fact is that lactic acid, when it
has done its work, must be got rid of somehow in order that the
machine may be kept going.
By a well-known calculation Hill tried to find support for the
recently quoted supposition of Fletcher and Hopkins with regar d
to a reversion, in conjunction with the lactic acid combustion,
of lactic acid to glycogen during the phase of recovery. It is
easy to see that the correctness of this supposition forms a
condition that the model cited should be acceptable from the
point of view of energetics. But objections were made against the
analyses and arguments of Fletcher and Hopkins. Moreover, there
were adduced, from what were considered to be extremely competent
quarters, direct observations which seemed to show that the
lactic acid formed in the working phase was completely used in
the process of recovery - a piece of wastefulness on the part of
Nature which could only be explained by means of auxiliary
hypotheses in the presence of which it would have been the
simplest thing to let the whole of the attractive model take part
in the combustion.
It is at this stage in the development of the question that
Meyerhof's contribution comes in. In his investigations
concerning the respiration of the tissues (1918) he came to
devote his attention to the things that take place in the
surviving muscle, and in this connection also to the objections
that had been raised against the conclusions of Fletcher and
Hopkins and their interpretation of the «lactic acid
maximum» of the muscle. He showed that these objections do
not really affect the result of the recently cited calculations
of Hill. Most important of all, however, was his parallel
determination of the lactic acid metabolism and the oxygen
consumption during the recovery of the muscle, which yielded
the result that the oxygen consumption does not correspond to
more than 1/3 - 1/4 of the simultaneous lactic acid metabolism.
Evidently the greater part of the lactic acid disappears in some
other way than through combustion. In another parallel
determination - the development of heat and the oxygen
consumption - the development of heat exhibited a deficit in
comparison with what could be calculated from the simultaneously
observed oxygen consumption. From this the conclusion may be
drawn that the combustion of lactic acid in the muscle is
combined with some other process, an endothermic one, in the
course of which part of the heat developed in the combustion is
used up. Meyerhof also made a parallel determination of the
carbohydrates and lactic acid in the resting and in the working
muscle, also in the recovery period after fatigue; he found: when
lactic acid is stored in the muscle, an equivalent quantity of
carbohydrates, chiefly glycogen, disappears, while when lactic
acid disappears, the quantity of carbohydrates in the muscle is
increased by an amount equivalent to the difference between the
total amount of lactic acid that has disappeared and the quantity
oxidized corresponding to the oxygen consumption.
Hence the processes which we have to take into account in the
muscles are: (1) the formation of lactic acid from
carbohydrates; (2) the combustion of lactic acid to
carbonic acid and water; and (3) the reversion of lactic
acid to carbohydrates. But these processes are not confined to
the uninjured muscle. Meyerhof has also traced them in finely
chopped muscle substance kept moist in a suitable liquid, and in
that case found them take place 10-29 times more rapidly than in
the well-known muscle preparation. In such a dilution it is also
possible to study the effect of different factors such as the
concentration of hydrogen ions, the presence of phosphates, etc.;
and in particular it has been possible to make clear to what
extent the various processes are connected with one another or
can be varied in relation to one another. A matter of extremely
great interest is the establishment of the fact that the
combustion of lactic acid in the muscle cannot take place without
a simultaneous formation of lactic acid from carbohydrates, and
that the combustion of lactic acid is connected with the
formation of carbohydrates in such a way that out of four
molecules of lactic acid one is oxidized, while the three
others are reverted to carbohydrates. lt is not inconceivable
that the reversion does not always extend so far as to produce
carbohydrates; but the ideal course of the process may be
regarded as precisely defined by Meyerhof, and it has been
represented by him in the form of a scheme of chemical reaction.
In this scheme, too, can well be fitted the lactacidogen
discovered by Embden as a connecting link between glycogen and
lactic acid.
The chemical processes just cited have to be fitted into the
model of the muscle machine. Ignoring other considerations than
those of energy, we can express the course of action in
the following way: the change in the muscle which forms the basis
of the mechanical process (the external work) presupposes a
certain quantity of lactic acid, which comes from the muscle's
store of glycogen. When this lactic acid has done its work, 1/4
is burnt into carbonic acid and water, while 3/4 return to the
store of glycogen. The upper limit of the efficiency of the
machine, calculated according to this scheme, will be 50%, which
fully corresponds to the real state of things.
The combustion of lactic acid demands oxygen. The muscle
preparation, however, can work even if the supply of oxygen is
cut off. The lactic acid formed at every twitch spreads in the
muscle out from the places where it is formed until the muscle
substance finally becomes so impregnated with lactic acid that it
is not relaxed between the twitches, and the impulses applied do
not give rise to any further formation of lactic acid. The muscle
is exhausted or, as one might also put it, poisoned with lactic
acid. In the body the muscle is transfused with blood, which
supplies oxygen in far greater abundance than that which the
excised muscle preparation can obtain from its environment. Owing
to its store of alkali, moreover, the blood itself provides room
for a certain quantity of lactic acid from working muscles - a
quantity of lactic acid that the blood can afterwards get rid of
during a subsequent interval in the work. The possibility of thus
distributing the combustion of lactic acid during a period that
is longer than the work itself, provides us with an explanation
of the immense amount of work achieved, especially in the
sporting competitions of our day. Even with a volume per minute
corresponding to the extreme working capacity of the heart there
is not obtained in these cases a supply of oxygen corresponding
to the formation of lactic acid in the muscles; and consequently
the individual exposes himself to an accumulation of lactic acid
in the blood and in all the tissues or the body - an accumulation
that must be characterized as poisoning. When we are dealing with
competitions for children and young people who are not yet grown
up, there is good reason to think about this detail with regard
to the muscle machine.
Professors Hill and Meyerhof. Your
brilliant discoveries concerning the vital phenomena of muscles
supplement each other in a most happy manner. It has given a
special satisfaction to be able to reward these two series of
discoveries at the same time, since it gives a clear expression
of one of the ideas upon which the will of Alfred Nobel was
founded, that is, the conception that the greatest cultural
advances are independent of the splitting-up of mankind into
contending nations. I also feel confident that you will be glad
to know that the proposition which has led to this award of the
Nobel Prize originated from a German scientist who, in spite of
all difficulties and disasters, has clearly recognized the main
object of Alfred Nobel.
In conferring upon both of you the sincere congratulations of the
Caroline Institute, I have the honour of asking you to receive
from His Majesty the King the Nobel Prize for 1922 in Physiology
or Medicine.
* The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922 was announced on October 25, 1923.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1921-1922, Editor Carl Gustaf Santesson, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1923
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1922