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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1931
Otto Warburg
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor E. Hammarsten, member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine of the Royal Caroline Institute, on December 10, 1931
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The discovery for which the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine is to be awarded today concerns intracellular
combustion: that fundamental vital process by which substances
directly supplied to cells or stored in them are broken down into
simpler components while using up oxygen. It is by this process
that the energy required for other vital processes is made
available to the cells in a form capable of immediate
utilization.
Many famous names and many discoveries have been associated with
research on this vital process, while, before natural
philosophical thought was limited by the demands of accurate
measurement, it was a fertile field for speculation. The life
work of many savants finds a place in the volume of which Otto
Warburg has written - for the time being - the last pages. The
first were written by John Mayow in 1670, then less than 30 years
of age, whose observations on the power of saltpetre to set fire
to organic substances led him to the view that certain igneo-aer
al particles existed in saltpetre, in the air, and also in
organic substances. He inferred that the significance and
function of respiration was to bring these particles into the
body, and so make combustion therein possible. It is clear that
Mayow's igneo-aerial particles correspond with oxygen, which had
not yet been discovered. Some thirty years later the ill-famed
phlogiston theory of combustion was born, and spread like an
epidemic throughout the scientific world, causing the seeking for
truth to be diverted from its proper course that had been opened
by Mayow's discovery, which had, if one may use a somewhat
dubious expression, been made before its time and had received
little attention. Comprehension of the mechanism of combustion
was thus, quite foolishly as it might seem, delayed for more than
a century. Return to the proper path had to await the discovery
by Lavoisier of the real nature of the process in connection with
the final discovery and isolation of oxygen in the hands of
Priestley and Scheele. Otto Warburg's work has met with a kinder
fate.
As combustion of foodstuffs outside the body in the presence of
atmospheric oxygen occurs only at high temperatures, it must be
assumed that during combustion in living cells, something happens
that alters the rather inert air-oxygen, or the foodstuff, or
perhaps both so that they can react with each other. Fully
conscious of the insuperable difficulties of explaining at
present the innermost mechanism by which this inertness was
overcome, Warburg decided to investigate the nature of the
mysterious substance that acts as the primus motor in
intracellular combustion. Nature often seems to use methods that
appear to be indirect and less «natural» than those we
should have devised, and such was the case here. It was not
possible to isolate the active substance, the catalyst, or
respiratory ferment as Warburg called it, by ordinary chemical
methods, because it forms less than about a millionth of the
weight of the cells to which it is firmly bound, while it is
easily destroyed by procedures which might be used for liberating
it. So, just as in modern atomic research, indirect methods had
to be used.
It had been known, since the days of Davy and Berzelius, that
many metals possess the power of initiating or accelerating
various reactions, including combustion. Starting from the
possibility that had indeed been envisaged earlier, Warburg
assumed that intracellular combustion might also be regarded as
being due to catalysis by metals, i.e. that it might be initiated
by some metallic compound. Definite proof that he was on the
track of this well-hidden secret of Nature was obtained by the
use of exact measurements of combustion in living cells or, as
Warburg calls it, cell respiration. The quantitatively measured
variations in the process of combustion under different
conditions threw light on the nature of the respiratory ferment.
Its tendency to enter into compounds with substances which
combine with iron showed that it is itself an iron compound, and
that its effects are due to iron. The correspondence between the
effects of light on cellular combustion inhibited by carbon
monoxide and on carbon-monoxide compounds of certain pigments
closely related to blood pigments led, with the aid of a detailed
mathematical analysis to the conclusion that the respiratory
ferment is a red pigment containing iron, and that it is closely
related to our own blood pigment. This was the first
demonstration of an effective catalyst, a ferment, in the living
organism, and this identification is the more important because
it throws light on a process of general significance in the
maintenance of life.
Professor Warburg. From the start, your
research has been focussed on problems of central importance.
Your bold ideas, but above all, your keen intelligence and rare
perfection in the art of exact measurement have won for you
exceptional successes, and for the science of biology some of its
most valuable material.
I take the liberty of mentioning those two of your discoveries,
which seem to be of the greatest value.
The medical world expects great things from your experiments on
cancer and other tumours, experiments which seem already to be
sufficiently far advanced to be able to furnish an explanation
for at least one cause of the destructive and unlimited growth of
these tumours.
Your discovery about the nature and effect of the ferment of
respiration, which the Caroline Institute is rewarding this year
with Alfred Nobel's Prize for Physiology or Medicine, has added a
link of brilliant achievement to the chain that binds for all
time, John Mayow (England), Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (France),
and Otto Warburg (Germany). On behalf of the Caroline Institute I
invite you to accept the prize from the hands of our King.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1931
MLA style: "Physiology or Medicine 1931 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 20 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1931/press.html
