Press Release: The 1971 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
October 1971
Karolinska Institutet has decided to award
the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1971 to
Earl
Sutherland
for his discoveries concerning "the mechanisms of
the action of hormones".
Sutherland has started his investigations
already some twenty years ago. In collaboration with the Nobel Laureate Carl
Cori he studied the mechanism by which epinephrine regulates the
degradation of glycogen to glucose in the liver. Epinephrine is secreted
into the blood stream from the adrenals under the conditions of "stress"
and constitutes the signal that adapts the individual to the new
situation. This implies that the organism requires more energy, which is
obtained by the epinephrine mobilizing the blood sugar. In an analogous
manner many other hormones act as specific signals for the adaptation of
the individual to the varied requirements of his surroundings.
The
mechanism by which various hormones exert their extremely important
functions has until recently been a complete enigma. Because of the work
of Sutherland we can today understand the general mode of action of many
of them.
Sutherland first discovered that epinephrine acts by
activating the enzyme (phosphorylase) which leads to the formation of
glucose from glycogen. Later he found that this activation took place by
means of a hitherto unknown substance which occurs as an intermediate
during the process. The discovery and chemical characterization of the
intermediate, which has been termed "the second messenger" by Sutherland
(the hormone itself is the first messenger) was of crucial importance for
an understanding of the mechanism of action of epinephrine and of many
other hormones. The newly identified substance proved to be a so called
nucleotide, and was named cyclic adenosine phosphate or cyclic
AMP.
Sutherland's discovery implies that epinephrine induces a
formation of cyclic AMP in the liver cells and the nucleotide then
converts the inactive phosphorylase to the active enzyme.
The
enzyme finally leads to the formation of glucose. The important question
then arose as to the manner by which the hormone stimulates the cell to
the formation of cyclic AMP. Sutherland found that this took place by way
of a newly discovered enzyme called adenyl cyclase.
The whole chain
of reactions is shown in the following scheme:
 |
According to the scheme the epinephrine is attached to
a receptor on the surface of the cell. This leads to stimulation of adenyl
cyclase which also is located on the cell surface. This enzyme forms
cyclic AMP which then exerts its effect in the cell by the activation of
phosphorylase. Surtherland originally used this schematic picture to
explain the results of his investigations on the effect of epinephrine.
However, as early as about 1960 he suggested that the effects of many
other hormones could be explained on essentially similar lines. The
principal idea in Sutherland's scheme is that the various hormones do not
enter the cell but are caught on to the surface of the latter. This leads
to an activation of the formation of cyclic AMP which in the cell then
activates or inhibits various metabolic processes.
This general
hypothesis at first met with strong criticism by scientists since it
seemed to be impossible that a single substance (i.e. cyclic AMP) could
lead to the numerous more or less specific effects that are known to be
caused by different hormones. During the latter part of the l960's
decisive proof has, however, been obtained for the correctness of
Sutherland's point of view. His own investigations have contributed
greatly to this development and today it has been convincingly shown that
besides epinephrine a large number of so called polypeptide hormones exert
their effects by way of the cellular surface in accordance with the scheme
postulated by Sutherland. The specificity of the individual hormone is
dependent on the presence of different receptors in the cellular wall, and
on the occurrence of different chemical reactions influenced by cyclic AMP
in the cell itself.
Cyclic AMP was discovered as the "second
messenger" in relation to hormonal effects. It therefore came as no
surprise when Sutherland in 1965 found that the substance also occurred in
bacteria. The latter were held to have no need for hormonal effects. The
discovery of cyclic AMP in bacteria and similar findings in other
unicellular organisms have already opened up new wide biological
perspectives. Work during the past few years has show that cyclic AMP
exerts several regulatory functions of vital importance in unicellular
organisms, functions governing the adaptation of the cell to its
surroundings. In these instances cyclic AMP may be regarded as an original
"primitive hormone". |