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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922
Archibald V. Hill, Otto Meyerhof
Otto Fritz Meyerhof
Born: 12 April 1884, Hanover, Germany
Died: 6 October 1951, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Affiliation at the time of the award: Kiel University, Kiel, Germany
Prize motivation: "for his discovery of the fixed relationship between the consumption of oxygen and the metabolism of lactic acid in the muscle"
Otto Meyerhof received his Nobel Prize one year later, in 1923.
Biography
Otto Fritz
Meyerhof was born on April 12, 1884, in Hannover. He was the
son of Felix Meyerhof, a merchant of that city and his wife
Bettina May. Soon after his birth his family moved to Berlin,
where he went to the Wilhelms Gymnasium (classical secondary
school). Leaving school at the age of 14, he was attacked, at the
age of 16, by kidney trouble and had to spend a long time in bed.
During this period of enforced inactivity he was much influenced
by his mother's constant companionship. He read much, wrote
poetry, and went through a period of much artistic and mental
development. After he had matriculated, he studied medicine at
Freiburg, Berlin, Strasbourg, and
Heidelberg.
In 1909 he graduated in medicine with a thesis on a psychiatric
subject and devoted himself for a time to psychology and
philosophy, publishing a book entitled Beiträge zur
psychologischen Theorie der Geistesstörungen
(Contributions to the psychological theory of mental
disturbances) and an essay on Goethes Methoden der
Naturforschung (Goethe's methods of scientific research).
Under the influence of Otto
Warburg, however, who was then at Heidelberg, he became more
and more interested in cell physiology. After working for a short
time on physical chemistry with Bredig at Heidelberg, Meyerhof
spent some time in the laboratory of the Heidelberg Clinic and at
the Zoological Station at Naples. In 1912 he went to Kiel, where he qualified in 1913,
under Professor Bethe, as a university lecturer in physiology;
and lectures which he delivered at Kiel, in England and the
United States were published as The Chemical Dynamics of
Living Matter. In 1915, when Professor Höber assumed the
Directorship of the Institute of Physiology, Meyerhof was
appointed Assistant. In 1918 he became Assistant Professor. In
1923 he was offered a Professorship of Biochemistry in the United
States, but Germany was unwilling to lose him and in 1924 he was
asked by the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft to join the group
working at Berlin-Dahlem, which included C. Neuberg, F. Haber, M. Polyani,
and H. Freundlich.
In 1929 he was asked to take charge of the newly founded Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research at Heidelberg. In 1938
conditions became too difficult for him and he decided to leave
Germany. From 1938 to 1940 he was Director of Research at the
Institut de Biologie physico-chimique at Paris, where he was
helped financially by the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation.
In June, 1940, however, when the Nazis invaded France, he had to
flee from Paris. Driving with his family to Toulouse, he was
befriended by the Medical Faculty there, but escape became
essential and a tragic flight followed. Eventually, with the help
of the Unitarian Service Committee, he reached Spain and
ultimately, in October 1940, the United States, where the post of
Research Professor of Physiological Chemistry had been created
for him by the University of
Pennsylvania and the Rockefeller Foundation.
Meyerhof's own account of his earlier work states that he was
occupied chicfly with oxidation mechanisms in cells and with
extending methods of gas analysis through the calorimetric
measurement of heat production. In this manner he studied the
metabolism of sea-urchin eggs, blood corpuscles, and various
bacteria and especially the respiratory processes of nitrifying
bacteria.
He also studied the effects of narcotics and methylene blue on
oxidation processes, and the respiration of killed cells. The
physico-chemical analogy between oxygen respiration and alcoholic
fermentation caused him to study both these processes in the same
subject, namely, yeast extract. By this work he discovered a
co-enzyme of respiration, which could be found in all the cells
and tissues up till then investigated. At the same time he also
found a co-enzyme of alcoholic fermentation. He also discovered
the capacity of the SH-group to transfer oxygen; after Hopkins had isolated from cells the SH
bodies concerned, Meyerhof showed that the unsaturated fatty
acids in the cell are oxidized with the help of the sulphydryl
group. After studying closer the respiration of muscle, Meyerhof
investigated the energy changes in muscle.
Of Meyerhof's many achievements, perhaps the most important is
his proof that, in isolated but otherwise intact frog muscle, the
lactic acid formed is reconverted to carbohydrate in the presence
of oxygen, and his preparation of a KC1 extract of muscle which
could carry out all the steps of glycolysis with added glycogen
and hexose-diphosphate in the presence of hexokinase derived from
yeast. In this system glucose was also glycolysed and this was
the foundation of the Embden-Meyerhof theory of glycolysis. For
his discovery of the fixed relationship between the consumption of
oxygen and the metabolism of lactic acid in the muscle, Meyerhof
was awarded, together with the English physiologist A.V. Hill, the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine for 1922.
The discovery of Otto Meyerhof and his students that some
phosphorylated compounds are rich in energy led to a revolution,
not only of our concepts of muscular contraction, but of the
entire significance of cellular metabolism. A continuously
increasing number of enzymatic reactions are becoming known in
which the energy of adenosine triphosphate, the compound isolated
by his associate Lohmann, provides the energy for endergonic
synthesis reactions. The importance of this discovery for the
understanding of cellular mechanisms is generally recognized and
can hardly be overestimated.
In 1925 Meyerhof succeeded in extracting the glycolytic enzyme
system from muscle, retracing a pathway which Buchner and Harden and Young had
explored in yeast. This proved to be a decisive step for the
analysis of glycolysis. Meyerhof and his associates were able to
reconstruct in vitro the main steps of the complicated
chain of reactions leading from glycogen to lactic acid. They
verified some, and extended other, parts of the scheme proposed
by Gustav Embden in 1932, shortly before his death.
Among other honours and distinctions, Meyerhof was a Foreign
Member of the Harvey Society and of the Royal Society of London, and a
Member of the National
Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A.
As a man Meyerhof was a fine experimenter and a master of
physiological chemistry. By temperament he was most interested in
theory and interpretation and he had a remarkable gift of
integrating a variety of phenomena. He spent much time daily at
his desk and in stimulating discussions with his pupils and
collaborators. His chief scientific work was accomplished while
he was at Heidelberg, but he also produced much while he was in
America; and in America also he showed that he had never
relinquished his active interest in philosophy by presenting to
the Goethe Biennial Celebration of the Rudolf Virchow Society in
New York a profound and critical evaluation of Goethe's
scientific ideas. Throughout his life he retained a great love of
art, literature, and poetry. His interest in painting was much
stimulated by his wife Hedwig Schallenberg, herself a painter,
whom he married in 1914. There were three children of this
marriage.
In 1944 he suffered a heart attack; in 1951 another one which
ended his life.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
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.
Otto Meyerhof died on October 6, 1951.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1922
MLA style: "Otto Meyerhof - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 26 May 2012 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1922/meyerhof.html
