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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1947
Sir Robert Robinson
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor A. Fredga, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesty, Royal Highnesses, Ladies and
Gentlemen.
One of the principal aims of organic chemistry is to make clear
the chemical structure of substances found in living nature.
Interest has been directed particularly towards substances with
vital functions or otherwise obvious qualities. The structure of
simpler compounds was largely elucidated during the nineteenth
century, the more complicated ones being reserved for our
century. Sir Robert Robinson's exceedingly fruitful work treats
many groups of such substances. In comprehensive investigations
he has dealt with the anthocyans, a group of red, blue, or violet
pigments found almost everywhere within the vegetable kingdom,
and which we meet with in the cornflower and the lark-spur of the
fields as well as in claret and beetroot. He has done important
work on sex hormones and synthetic substances of less complicated
structure but with similar properties. He has done pioneering
work on synthetic drugs against malaria, he has contributed
towards the investigation of penicillin and he has successfully
attacked fundamental questions concerning the mechanism of
organic-chemical reactions. In presenting him with this year's
Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the Royal Academy of Sciences has in
mind, however, particularly his work on alkaloids.
By alkaloids we understand a numerous group of nitrogenous basic
substances from the vegetable kingdom. They usually have
striking, sometimes sensational physiological effects. Among them
are quinine, cocaine, and atropine, all of which have important
medicinal qualities, further morphine, doubtless well-known, and
strychnine known for its medicinal value and - in somewhat larger
doses - as an exceedingly active poison. Plants containing
alkaloids have generally drawn the attention of primitive
peoples, and in the cases where they are met with in countries
with ancient culture, the knowledge of their properties often
goes back to pre-historic age. They have been used as medicines
and means of enjoyment, for ritual and criminal purposes. They
can carry our thoughts to poetry and romance - it is not only
decadent poets who have sung the praise of opium and poppy juice
- but they have also been associated with vice, crime and
horror.
During the nineteenth century we began to learn how to isolate
the active substances themselves, the alkaloids, and
investigation of their chemistry still continues with unabated
interest. It was soon found that these alkaloids are usually very
complicated in structure; the molecule of morphine contains 40
atoms, that of strychnine 47, each of which has its definite
place in relation to the others. To reveal the inner architecture
of these complicated systems through different chemical
operations is a task as difficult as it is fascinating. It
requires great experimental skill, creative power and sharp
logic. In this sphere of alkaloid research, Sir Robert stands out
as our foremost contemporary. He has solved the riddle of the
morphine molecule's structure, in connection with which quite 20
different formulae have been under consideration, he has
clarified the essential features of the strychnine formula, even
though some details are still uncertain, and he has made decisive
contributions towards the investigation of many other alkaloids
with strangely sounding names like gnoscopine, harmaline,
physostigmine, and rutaecarpine.
It has often been asked how plants build up these singular
molecules. Here, Sir Robert has formed a theory which rests upon
the amino-acids contained in proteins, and which seems to present
a satisfactory answer to the question. The theory is illustrated
by Sir Robert's famous synthesis of tropinone, a substance
closely related to cocaine. We have here a case where three
rather simple molecules spontaneously unite into a complicated
system, which earlier we could only build up step by step through
a long series of reactions. We may suppose that here Sir Robert
has found the key to nature's own way of working. This theory has
also gained great importance as a guide when determining
intricate structures, and it has rendered it possible to trace
hidden connections within the multifarious group of alkaloidal
substances.
The tendency in natural science tends more and more to the
removal of the traditional boundaries between the different
sciences. The sum of total knowledge constantly increases, human
intellect, however, is limited and cooperation therefore becomes
a matter of necessity. For the individual scientist it becomes a
difficult task to broaden and deepen his science on its own
particular basis without turning his back upon productive
collaboration. Perhaps this is felt particularly in chemistry; it
is there that the threads of research into life and matter run
together, and thus chemistry has acquired a key position within
the natural science of to-day. Sir Robert has solved the problem
with great success. He has devoted his life to organic chemistry,
but the importance and the consequences of his work extend far
into the fields of biological and medicinal research.
Professor Sir Robert Robinson. The
intricate problems of organic structure are not of a nature to
attract the interest of the general public. Our science is an
exclusive one. You have not gained your scientific reputation by
startling discoveries, which, like the atomic fission, resound in
the columns of the daily press.
By your very important and very numerous investigations, you have
gradually changed our ideas on fundamental questions. As a
student of molecular architecture you have, with eminent success,
pursued the line of work emerging from Kekulé and Couper,
and you have thrown light upon the formation of complicated
structures within the living plant. Among organic chemists, you
are to-day acknowledged as a leader and a teacher, second to
none. In recognition of your services to Science, the Royal
Academy has decided to bestow upon you the Nobel Prize for
Chemistry for your investigations on plant products of biological
importancc and especially for your outstanding work on the
structure and the biogenesis of complicated alkaloids.
Sir Robert. On behalf of the Academy, I request you to receive
your prize from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1947
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