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Press Release: The 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine
KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
October 1977
The Karolinska
Institute has decided that the Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine for 1977 should be divided, one half being awarded jointly
to
Roger Guillemin and Andrew Schally
for
their discoveries concerning "the peptide hormone production of the
brain" and the other half to
Rosalyn Yalow
for "the development of radioimmunoassays of peptid
hormones".
This year's Nobel Laureates in Physiology or
Medicine have made their discoveries within the field of peptide
hormones (peptides being substances built up by chains of amino
acids). Many hormones in the body belong to this group and are
produced by the hypophysis, the thyroid gland, the parathyroid
glands, the placenta, the gastro-intestinal tract and other tissues.
New such hormones are still being discovered.
While chemical
methods for quantitative analysis of other hormones in blood and
urine were in common use in the middle 1950's, such specific
analytical procedures were not available for peptide hormones. The
main, but not the only reason for this was their occurrence in blood
in extremely low concentrations. For example, the molar
concentration of pituitary ACTH under basal conditions is 1 x
10-12 . To measure such a small amount of ACTH with
prevailing biological methods as much as 250 ml of blood was
necessary!
The lack of specific procedures to measure
peptide hormones in blood with some degree of accuracy brought about
stagnation within a large section of biological and medical
research. And what was worse, on the basis of unreliable biological
determinations of peptide hormones, hypotheses on physiological
mechanisms and pathological events were advanced which led research
astray.
The contributions of Rosalyn Yalow have to be
regarded in the light of this context. Together with her late
coworker, Solomon Berson, she was able to pull down this barrier to
development - and this was accomplished in a most unexpected way.
Yalow and Berson, towards the middle 1950's made the surprising
finding that people who had received injections of the polypeptide
hormone insulin - be it for diabetes or for treatment of
schizophrenia - had developed antibodies against the hormone. This
conflicted with the prevailing concept which was that such a small
protein as insulin could not be antigenic. It took considerable time
before this was accepted. In addition, some other findings were made
that would become crucial to this whole field of research: the
insulin antibodies formed a soluble complex with added insulin
labeled with radioactive iodine and, furthermore, when non-labeled
insulin was added to this mixture it could displace the labeled
insulin bound to the antibody. This may be expressed in another way:
the percentage binding of labeled insulin to the antibodies is a
function of the total insulin concentration in the solution. This
was to become the starting-point for radioimmunological
determination of insulin and, later, for all peptide hormones in
blood, other fluids and tissues.
In a series of brilliant,
now classical papers between 1956-60 they described the
radioimmunological assay method (or RIA) in detail. It was
accomplished by a spectacular combination of immunology, isotope
research, mathematics and physics. RIA is so sensitive that it
allowed determination of insulin in amounts as small as 10-20 pg and
ACTH in an amount less than 1 pg (or one thousand-billionth g) per
ml.
RIA brought about a revolution in biological and medical
research. We have today at our disposal a large number of RIA-like
procedures, so-called ligand methods, for determination of almost
anything we wish to measure: peptide hormones, hormones that are not
peptides, peptides that are not hormones, enzymes, viruses,
antibodies, drugs of the most different kinds etc. This has brought
about an enormous development in hitherto closed areas of
research.
But Yalow's contributions were not limited to
presenting us with RIA. In a series of classical articles she and
her coworkers, with the aid of RIA, were able to elucidate the
physiology of the peptide hormones insulin, ACTH, growth hormone,
and also to throw light upon the pathogenesis of diseases caused by
abnormal secretion of these hormones. Thus, they directed diabetes
research into new tracks and gave it a new dimension. This was
pioneering work at the highest level. It had an enormous impact. We
were witnessing the birth of a new era in endocrinology, one that
started with Yalow. This modern endocrinology continues to develop
and gives us continuously new outlooks on the causes and nature of
diseases within the whole spectrum of medicine.
The
discoveries of Roger Guillemin and Andrew Schally deal
with another sector of peptide hormone physiology and medicine.
The pituitary gland secretes a number of hormones which are
transported with the blood to most hormone producing glands in the
body. In these, they stimulate their specific function - to produce
and release hormones. It has long been known that the central
nervous system in some way could modulate endocrine functions and
that, probably, the brain stem - the hypothalamus - acted as an
intermediary in this process. In some way, information was passed to
the hypophysis which, by way of its specific hormones, transferred
the information to the other endocrine glands. As early as 1930, it
was discovered that small blood vessels connected the hypophysis
with the hypothalamus, and that these might be the route of
transport of the information from the brain to the hypophysis.
Towards the end of the 1950's, Guillemin and Schally, each
in his own laboratory, were able to extract from the hypothalamus of
sheep and pigs some compounds which, when administered to pituitary
tissue, brought about release of its hormones. One extract made the
pituitary release ACTH, another TSH (Thyroid
Stimulating Hormone), a third one LH and FSH (the
gonadotrophic hormones) etc. They termed these substances "releasing
factors or hormones", RF or RH. The one inducing the release of TSH,
thus was called TSH-RF or TRF.
However, it was not until
1969 that the nature of these hypothalamic factors would be
established. Guillemin was working with 5 million hypothalamic
fragments from sheep, and Schally with the same amount of material
but from pigs. They concentrated their efforts to the search for one
of the releasing factors, TRF. After years of struggle, during which
the two groups established a formidable race, they stood there one
day with 1 mg (!) of a pure substance with one single mode of
action: it released TSH from the hypophysis. This was TRF. After
another few months the structure of TRF was established. It is an
extremely small peptide composed of three amino acids in a special
fashion:
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Within the same year TRF was synthesized by the
Guillemin group.
The ice was broken. Within two years LH-RH
was isolated, sequenced and synthesized, firstly by Schally and
shortly afterwards by Guillemin.
Guillemin's and Schally's
discoveries laid the foundations to modern hypothalamic research.
The experiences from animal research was rapidly transferred to
humans and brought into clinical work. Several new peptides were
isolated from the hypothalamus, the foremost one probably being the
first inhibitor of pituitary function: somatostatin, which decreases
the production of pituitary growth hormone.
As an extension
of Guillemin's and Schally's discoveries may be regarded the
exciting finding of peptides in the brain with morphine-like
activity, the endorphines. Peptides with hormone-like activity have
also been identified in other parts of the brain. The central
nervous system more and more moves forward as an endocrine organ,
which opens fascinating perspectives in medicine. We are looking
forward to an enormous development in this field, to which Guillemin
and Schally opened the door.
The important discoveries by
the 1977 Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine has led to a
formidable development of their own fields of research. Further,
they have opened new vistas within biological and medical research
far outside the borders of their own spheres of interest. |
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