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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1965
François Jacob, André Lwoff, Jacques Monod
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor Sven Gard, member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine of the Royal Caroline Institute
Your Majesties, Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is shared by
Professors Jacob, Lwoff and Monod for «discoveries
concerning the genetic regulation of enzyme and virus
synthesis».
This particular sphere of research is by no means easy. I heard
one of the prize winners, Professor Jacob, forewarn an audience
of specialists more or less as follows: «In describing
genetic mechanisms, there is a choice between being inexact and
incomprehensible». In making this presentation, I shall try
to be as inexact as conscience permits.
It has become progressively more apparent that the answer to what
has hitherto been romantically termed the secret of life must be
sought in the mechanism of action and in the structure of the
hereditary material, the genes. This central field of research
has naturally been approached from the periphery and in stages.
Only in recent years has it been possible to make a serious
attack on these fundamental problems.
Several previous Nobel Prize holders: Beadle, Tatum, Crick, Watson, Wilkins, Kornberg and Ochoa have worked in this sphere of
research and have formulated certain basic proposals which have
enabled the French scholars to continue their efforts. It has
been established that one of the principal functions of genes
must be to determine the nature and number of enzymes within the
cell, the chemical apparatus which controls all the reactions by
which the cellular material is formed and the energy necessary
for various life processes is released. There is thus a
particular gene for each specific enzyme.
In addition, some light has been thrown on the chemical structure
of genes. In principle, they have the form of a long double chain
consisting of four different components, which can be designated
by the letters a, c, g, and t, and with the property of forming
pairs with each other. An «a» in one of the chains has
to be matched by a «t» in the other, a «g»
only by a «c». However, they can be linked along the
length of the chain in any order whatsoever, so that the number
of possible combinations is virtually unlimited. A chain of genes
contains from several hundreds to many thousands of units; such
structures can easily carry the specific patterns for the million
or more genes which it is estimated that a cell may have.
This model of the genes represents a coded message containing two
types of information. If the double chain of a gene is split
lengthwise and each half acquires a new partner, then the final
result is two double chains identical to the original gene. The
model thus contains information relative to the actual structure
of the gene, which permits multiplication, in its turn a
condition of heredity. When a cell divides, each daughter cell
receives an exact copy of the parent gene. The structure of the
double chain ensures the stability and permanence required by
hereditary material.
But the model can also be read in another way. Along the length
of the chain, the letters are grouped in threes in coded words.
An alphabet of four letters allows the formation of more than 30
different words and the sequence in the gene of such words
provides the structural information for an enzyme or some other
protein. Proteins are also chain molecules built up from twenty
or so different types of building blocks. To each of these
building blocks there corresponds a chemical code word of three
letters. The gene thus contains information on the number,
nature, and order of the building blocks in a particular
protein.
Thus it was already clear that the hereditary blueprint contained
the collective structural information for all substances
necessary for the functions of the living cell. It was not known
how the genetic information was put into effect or transformed
into chemical activity. As to the function of the genes, it was
thought that they participated in a sort of procreative act when
the new cell came into being, producing new substances necessary
for the life of the cell, but subsequently lying dormant until
the next cell division. It was presumed that the structure and
formation of the chemical apparatus determined in this way
defined all the regulatory mechanisms necessary for the cell's
ability to adapt to changes in the environment and to respond in
an adequate manner to stimuli of different types.
To begin with, the group of French workers were able to
demonstrate how the structural information of the genes was used
chemically. During a process resembling gene multiplication an
exact copy of the genetic code is produced, termed a messenger.
The latter is then incorporated into the chemical
«workshop» of the cell and wound like magnetic tape
onto a spool. For each word arriving on the spool, a
constructional unit is attracted, which carries a complement to
this word and attaches itself there just like a piece of jigsaw
puzzle. The building blocks of a protein are selected in this way
one by one, aligned, and joined together to form a protein with
the appropriate structure.
The messenger substance is, however, short-lived. The tape lasts
only for a few recordings. The enzymes are also used up in a
similar way. For the cell to maintain its activity, it is thus
necessary to have an uninterrupted production of the messenger
material, that is to say continuous activity of the corresponding
gene.
However, cells can adapt themselves to different external
conditions. Thus there must exist some mechanisms controlling the
activity of the genes. The research into the nature of these
mechanisms is a remarkable achievement which has opened the way
for the possible explanation of a series of hitherto mysterious
biological phenomena. The discovery of a previously unknown
class, the operator genes, which control the structural genes,
marks a major breakthrough.
There are two types of operator genes. One type releases chemical
signals, which are perceived by a second, receptor, type. The
latter controls in its turn one or more structural genes. As long
as the signals are being received the receptor remains blocked
and the structural genes are inactive. Certain substances coming
from outside or formed within the cell can, however, influence
the chemical signals in a specific manner, changing their
character so that they can no longer influence the receptor. The
latter is unblocked and activates the structural genes; messenger
material is produced and the synthesis of enzymes or another
protein commences.
Control of gene activity is thus of a negative nature; the
structural genes are only active if the repressor signals do not
arrive. One can speak here of chemical control circuits similar
in many ways to electrical circuits, for example in a television
set. In the same way, they can be interconnected or arranged in a
series to form complicated systems.
With the aid of such control circuits, the free living
monocellular organism can produce enzymes when required, or
interrupt chemical reactions if they are likely to cause damage;
an excitatory stimulus can provoke movement, flight or attack,
depending on the nature of the excitation. With such mechanisms
it is possible to direct the development of cells into more
complicated structures. It is particularly interesting to note
that the activity of viruses is controlled, in principle, in the
same manner.
Bacteriophages contain a genetic control circuit complete with
emitter, receptor, and structural genes. While chemical signals
are being sent and received, the virus remains inactive. When
incorporated into a cell, it behaves like a normal component of
the cell, and can confer on it new properties which may improve
its chances of survival in the struggle for existence. However,
if the signals are interrupted, the virus is activated, starts to
grow rapidly and soon kills the host cell. There is considerable
evidence for the view that certain types of tumor virus are
incorporated into a normal cell in the same way, thus
transforming it into a tumour cell.
We are easily inclined to hold an exaggerated opinion of
ourselves in this era of advanced technology. Thus, we are
justified in having a great admiration for the achievements in
electronics, where, for example, the attempts at miniaturization
to reduce component size, to lower the weight, and reduce the
volume of apparatus have enabled a rapid development of space
science. However, we should bear in mind that, millions of years
ago, nature perfected systems far surpassing all that the
inventive genius of man has been able to conceive hitherto. A
single living cell, measuring several thousandths of a
millimetre, contains hundreds of thousands of chemical control
circuits, exactly harmonized and functioning infallibly. It is
hardly possible to improve on miniaturization further; we are
dealing here with a level where the components are single
molecules. The group of French workers has opened up a field of
research which in the truest sense of the word can be described
as molecular biology.
Lwoff represents microbiology, Monod biochemistry, and Jacob
cellular genetics. Their decisive discovery would not have been
possible without competence and technical knowledge in all these
fields, nor without intimate cooperation between the three
researchers. But the mystery of life is not resolved simply with
knowledge and technical skill. One must also have a gift for
observation, a logical intellect, a faculty for the synthesis of
ideas, a degree of imagination, and scientific intuition,
qualities with which the three workers are liberally
endowed.
Research in this field has not yet yielded results that can be
used in practice. However, the discoveries have given a strong
impetus to research in all domains of biology with far-reaching
effects spreading out like ripples in the water. Now that we know
the nature of such mechanisms, we have the possibility of
learning to master them, with all the consequences which that
will surely entail for practical medicine.
François Jacob, André Lwoff, Jacques Monod. Thanks to your technically unimpeachable experiments and your ingenious and logical deductions, you have gained a more intimate familiarity with the nature of vital functions than anyone before you has done. Action, coordination, adaptation, variation - these are the most striking manifestations of living matter. By placing more emphasis on dynamic activity and mechanisms than on structure, you have laid the foundations for the science of molecular biology in the true sense of the term. In the name of the Caroline Institute, I ask you to accept our admiration and our most sincere congratulations. Finally, I invite you to come down from the platform to receive the prize from His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1965
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