I
was born on the 8th of October 1918 into a wealthy family in Lemvig, a town
in the western part of Denmark.
The town is nicely situated on a fjord, which
runs across the country from the Kattegat in East to the North Sea in West.
It is surrounded by hills, and is only 10 km, i.e. bicycling distance, from
the North Sea, with its beautiful beaches and dunes. My father Magnus Martinus
Skou together with his brother Peter Skou were timber and coal - Skou электродвигатель Jens Взрывозащищенный ВАО C. mes.com/ub/arch/48/06/incest-true-stories/"> C. Jens Skou - true incest stories merchants.
We lived in a big beautiful house, had a nice summer house on the North Sea
coast. We were four children, I was the oldest with a one year younger brother,
a sister 4 years younger and another brother 7 years younger. The timber-yard
was an excellent playground, so the elder of my brothers and I never missed
friends to play with. School was a minor part of life.
When I was 12 years old my father died from pneumonia. His brother continued
the business with my mother Ane-Margrethe Skou as passive partner, and gave
her such conditions that there was no change in our economical situation. My
mother, who was a tall handsome woman, never married again. She took care of
us four children and besides this she was very active in the social life in
town.
When I was 15, I went to a boarding school, a gymnasium (high school) in Haslev
a small town on Zealand, for the last three years in school (student exam).
There was no gymnasium in Lemvig.
Besides the 50-60 boys from the boarding section of the school there were about
400 day pupils. The school was situated in a big park, with two football fields,
facilities for athletics, tennis courts and a hall for gymnastics and handball.
There was a scout troop connected to the boarding section of the school. I had
to spend a little more time preparing for school than I was used to. My favourites
were the science subjects, especially mathematics. But there was plenty of time
for sports activities and scouting, which I enjoyed. All the holidays, Christmas,
Easter, summer and autumn I spent at home with my family.
After three years I got my exam, it was in 1937. I returned to Lemvig for the
summer vacation, considering what to do next. I could not make up my mind, which
worried my mother. I played tennis with a young man who studied medicine, and
he convinced me that this would be a good choice. So, to my mother's great relief,
I told her at the end of August that I would study medicine, and started two
days later at the University of Copenhagen.
The medical course was planned to take 7 years, 3 years for physics, chemistry,
anatomy, biochemistry and physiology, and 4 years for the clinical subjects,
and for pathology, forensic medicine, pharmacology and public health. I followed
the plan and got my medical degree in the summer of 1944.
I was not especially interested in living in a big town. On the other hand it
was a good experience for a limited number of years to live in, and get acquainted
with the capital of the country, and to exploit its cultural offers. Art galleries,
classical music and opera were my favourites.
For the first three years I spent the month between the semesters at home studying
the different subjects. For the last 4 years the months between the semesters
were used for practical courses in different hospital wards in Copenhagen.
It was with increasing anxiety that we witnessed to how the maniac dictator
in Germany, just south of our border, changed Germany into a madhouse. Our anxiety
did not become less after the outbreak of the war. In 1914 Denmark managed to
stay out of the war, but this time, in April 1940 the Germans occupied the country.
Many were ashamed that the Danish army were ordered by the government to surrender
after only a short resistance. Considering what later happened in Holland, Belgium
and France, it was clear that the Danish army had no possibility of stopping
the German army.
The occupation naturally had a deep impact on life in Denmark in the following
years, both from a material point of view, but also, what was much worse, we
lost our freedom of speech. For the first years the situation was very peculiar.
The Germans did not remove the Danish government, and the Danish government
did not resign, but tried as far as it was possible to minimize the consequences
of the occupation. The army was not disarmed, nor was the fleet. The Germans
wanted to use Denmark as a food supplier, and therefore wanted as few problems
as possible.
The majority of the population turned against the Germans, but with no access
to weapons, and with a flat homogeneous country with no mountains or big woods
to hide in, the possibility of active resistance was poor. So for the first
years the resistance only manifested itself in a negative attitude to the Germans
in the country, in complicating matters dealing with the Germans as far as possible,
and in a number of illegal journals, keeping people informed about the situation,
giving the information which was suppressed by the German censorship. There
was no interference with the teaching of medicine.
The Germans armed the North Sea coast against an invasion from the allied forces.
Access was forbidden and our summer house was occupied. My grandmother had died
in 1939, and we four children inherited what would have been my father's share.
For some of the money my brother and I bought a yacht, and took up sailing,
and this has since been an important part of my leisure time life. After the
occupation the Germans had forbidden sailing in the Danish seas except on the
fjord where Lemvig was situated, and another fjord in Zealand.
The resistance against the Germans increased as time went on, and sabotage slowly
started. Weapons and ammunition for the resistance movement began to be dropped
by English planes, and in August 1943 there were general strikes all over the
country against the Germans with the demand that the Government stopped giving
way to the Germans. The Government consequently resigned, the Germans took over,
the Danish marine sank the fleet and the army was disarmed. An illegal Frihedsråd
(the Danish Liberation Council) revealed itself, which from then on was what
people listened to and took advice from.
Following this, the sabotage against railways and factories working for the
Germans increased, and with this arrests and executions. One of our medical
classmates was a German informer. We knew who he was, so we could take care.
He was eventually liquidated by unknowns. We feared a reaction from Gestapo
against the class, and stayed away from the teaching.
The Germans planned to arrest the Jews, but the date, the night between the
first and second October 1943 was revealed by a high placed German. By help
from many, many people the Jews were hidden. Of about 7000, the Germans caught
472, who were sent to Theresienstadt where 52 died. In the following weeks illegal
routes were established across the sea, Øresund, to Sweden, and the Jews
were during the nights brought to safety. From all sides of the Danish society
there were strong protests against the Germans for this encroachment on fellow-countrymen.
In May and June 1944, we managed to get our exams. A number of our teachers
had gone underground, but their job was taken over by others. We could not assemble
to sign the Hippocratic oath, but had to come one by one at a place away from
the University not known by others.
I returned to my home for the summer vacation. The Germans had taken over part
of my mother's house, and had used it for housing Danes working for the Germans.
This was extremely unpleasant for my mother, but she would not leave her house
and stayed. I addressed the local German commander, and managed to get him to
move the "foreigners" from the house at least as long as we four children were
home on holiday.
The Germans had forbidden sailing, but not rowing, so we bought a canoe and
spent the holidays rowing on the fjord.
After the summer holidays I started my internship in a hospital in Hjørring
in the northern part of the country. I first spent 6 months in the medical ward,
and then 6 months in the surgical ward. I became very interested in surgery,
not least because the assistant physician, next in charge after the senior surgeon,
was very eager to teach me how to make smaller operations, like removing a diseased
appendix. I soon discovered why. When we were on call together and we during
the night got a patient with appendicitis, it happened--after we had started
the operation--that he asked me to take over and left. He was then on his way
to receive weapons and explosives which were dropped by English planes on a
dropping field outside Hjørring. I found that this was more important
than operating patients for appendicitis, but we had of course to take care
of the patients in spite of a war going on. He was finally caught by the Gestapo,
and sent to a concentration camp, fortunately not in Germany, but in the southern
part of Denmark, where he survived and was released on the 5th of May 1945,
when the Germans in Denmark surrendered.
I continued for another year in the surgical ward. It was here I became interested
in the effect of local anaesthetics, and decided
to use this as a subject for
a thesis. Thereafter I got a position at the Orthopaedic Hospital in Aarhus
as part of the education in surgery.
In 1947 I stopped clinical training, and got a position at the Institute for
Medical Physiology at Aarhus University in order to write the planned doctoral
thesis on the anaesthetic and toxic mechanism of action of local anaesthetics.
During my time in Hjørring I met a very beautiful probationer, Ellen
Margrethe Nielsen, with whom I fell in love. I had become ill while I was on
the medical ward, and spent some time in bed in the ward. I had a single room
and a radio, so I invited her to come in the evening to listen to the English
radio, which was strictly forbidden by the Germans - but was what everybody
did.
After she had finished her education as a nurse in 1948, she came to Aarhus
and we married. In 1950 we had a daughter, but unfortunately she had an inborn
disease and died after 1 1/2 years. Even though this was very hard, it brought
my wife and I closer together. In 1952, and in 1954 respectively we got two
healthy daughters, Hanne and Karen.
The salary at the University was very low, so partly because of this but also
because I was interested in using my education as a medical doctor, I took in
1949 an extra job as doctor on call one night a week. It furthermore had the
advantage that I could get a permission to buy a car and to get a telephone.
There were still after war restrictions on these items.
I was born in a milieu which politically was conservative. The job as a doctor
on call changed my political attitude and I became a social democrat. I realized
how important it is to have free medical care, free education with equal opportunities,
and a welfare system which takes care of the weak, the handicapped, the old,
and the unemployed, even if this means high taxes. Or as phrased by one of our
philosophers, N.F.S. Grundtvig, "a society where few have too much, and fewer
too little".
We lived in a flat, so the car gave us new possibilities. We wanted to have
a house, and my mother would give us the payment, but I was stubborn, and wanted
to earn the money myself. In 1957 we bought a house with a nice garden in Risskov,
a suburb to Aarhus not far away from the University.
I am a family man, I restricted my work at the Institute to 8 hours a day, from
8 to 4 or 9 to 5, worked concentratedly while I was there, went home and spent
the rest of the day and the evening with my wife and children. All weekends
and holidays, and 4 weeks summer holidays were spent with the family. In 1960
we bought an acre of land on a cliff facing the beach 45 minutes by car from
Aarhus, and built a small summer house. From then on this became the centre
for our leisure time life. We bought a dinghy and a rowing boat with outboard
motor and I started to teach the children how to sail, and to fish with fishing
rod and with net.
Later, when the girls grew older, we bought a yacht, the girls and I sailed
in the Danish seas, and up along the west coast of Sweden. My wife easily gets
seasick, but joined us on day tours. Later the girls took their friends on sail
tours.
In wintertime the family skied as soon as there was snow. A friend of mine,
Karl Ove Nielsen, a professor of physics, took me in the beginning of the 1960s
at Easter time on an 8-day cross country ski tour through the high mountain
area in Norway, Jotunheimen. We stayed overnight in the Norwegian Tourist Association's
huts on the trail, which were open during the Easter week. It was a wonderful
experience, but also a tour where you had to take all safety precautions. It
became for many years a tradition. Later the girls joined us, and they also
took some of their friends. When the weather situation did not allow this tour,
we spent a week in more peaceful surroundings either in Norway with cross-country
skiing or in the Alps with slalom. We still do, now with the girls, their husbands
and the grandchildren. Outside the sporting activities, I spend much time listening
to classical music, and reading, first of all biographies.
When the children left home, one for studying medicine and the other architecture,
my wife worked for several years as a nurse in a
psychiatric hospital for children,
then engaged herself in politics. She was elected for the County Council for
the social democrats, and spent 12 years on the council, first of all working
with health care problems. She was also elected to the county scientific ethical
committee, which evaluates all research which involves human beings. Later she
was elected co-chairman to the Danish Central Scientific Ethical Committee,
which lay down the guidelines for the work on the local committees, and which
is an appeal committee for the local committees as well as for the doctors.
She has worked 17 years on the committees and has been lecturing nurses and
doctors about ethical problems.
I had no scientific training when I started at the Institute of Physiology in
1947. It took me a good deal of time before I knew how to attack the problem
I was interested in and get acquainted with this new type of work. The chairman,
Professor Søren L. Ørskov was a very подиумы Rio KIA C. - накладки Skou бампер Jens на considerate person, extremely
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work I got so interested in doing scientific work that I decided to continue
and give up surgery. The thesis was published as a book in Danish in 1954, and
written up in 6 papers published in English. The work on the local anaesthetics,
brought me as described in the following paper to the identification of the
sodium-potassium pump, which is responsible for the active transport of sodium
and potassium across the cell membrane. The paper was published in 1957. From
then on my scientific interest shifted from the effect of local anaesthetics
to active transport of cations.
In the 1940s and the first part of the 1950s, the amount of money allocated
for research was small. Professor Ørskov, fell chronically ill. His illness
developed slowly so he continued in his position, but I, as the oldest in the
department after him, had partly to take over his job. This meant that besides
teaching in the semesters I had to spend two months per year examining orally
the students in physiology.
The identification of the sodium-potassium pump gave us contact to the outside
scientific world. In 1961, I met R.W. Berliner at an international Pharmacology
meeting in Stockholm. He mentioned the possibility of obtaining a grant from
National Institutes of Health (NIH). I applied and got a grant for two years.
The importance of this was not only the money, but that it showed interest in
the work we were doing.
In 1963, Professor Ørskov resigned and I was appointed professor and
chairman. In the late 1950s and especially in the 1960s, more money was allocated
to the Universities, and also more positions. Due to the work with the sodium-potassium
pump, it became possible to attract clever young people, and the institute staff
in a few years increased from 4 to 20-25 scientists. This had also an effect
on the teaching. I got a young doctor, Noe Næraa, who had expressed ideas
about medical teaching, to accept a position at the Institute. He started to
reorganise our old fashioned laboratory course, we got new modern equipment,
and thereafter we also reorganised the teaching, made it problem-oriented with
teaching in small classes. My scientific interest was membrane physiology, but
I wanted also to find people who could cover other aspects of physiology, so
we ended up with 5-6 groups who worked scientifically with different physiological
subjects.
In 1972 we got a new statute for the Universities, which involved a democratization
of the whole system. The chairman was no longer the professor (elected by the
board of chairmen which made up the faculty), but he/she was now elected by
all scientists and technicians in the Institute and could be anybody, scientist
or technician. This was of course a great relief for me because I could get
rid of all my administrative duties. A problem was, however, that I got elected
as chairman, but later others took over. In the beginning it was very tedious
to work with the system, not least because everybody thought that they should
be asked and take part in every decision. Later we learned to hand over the
responsibility to an elected board at the Institute.
In these years the money to the Institutes came from the Faculty, which got
it from the University (which got it from the State). The money was then divided
inside the institute by the chairman, and later by the elected board. It was
usually sufficient to cover the daily expenses of the research. External funds
were only for bigger equipment. Besides research-money we had a staff of very
well trained laboratory assistants, whose positions--as well as the positions
of the scientific staff--was paid by the University. The institute every year
sent a budget for the coming year, to the faculty, who then sent a budget for
the faculty to the University, and the University to the State.
This way of funding had the great advantage that there was not a steady pressure
on the scientists for publication and for sending applications for external
funds. It was a system that allowed everybody to start on his/her own project,
independently, and test their ideas. Nobody was forced from lack of money to
join a group which had money and work on their ideas. It was also a system which
could be misused, by people who were not active scientifically. With an elected
board it proved difficult to handle such a situation. Not least because the
very active scientists tried to avoid being elected - i.e. it could be the least
active who actually decided. In practice, however, the not very active scientists
usually accepted to do an extra job with the teaching, thus relieving the very
active scientists from part of the teaching burden.
In the 1980s this was changed, the money for science was transferred to centralized
(state) funds, and had to be applied for by the individual scientist. Not an
advantage from my point of view. Applications took a lot of time, it tempted
a too fast publication, and to publish too short papers, and the evaluation
process used a lot of manpower. It does not give time to become absorbed in
a problem as the previous system.
My research interest was concentrated around the structure and function of the
active transport system, the Na+,K+-ATPase. A number of
very excellent clever young scientists worked on different sides of the subject,
either their own choice or suggested by me. Each worked independent on his/her
subject. Scientists who took part in the work on the Na+,K+-ATPase
and who made important contributions to field were, P.L. Jørgensen (purification
and structure), I. Klodos (phosphorylation), O. Hansen (effect of cardiac glycosides
and vanadate), P. Ottolenghi (effect of lipids), J. Jensen (ligand binding),
J. G. Nørby (phosphorylation, ligand binding, kinetics), L. Plesner (kinetics),
M. Esmann (solubilization of the enzyme, molecular weight, ESR studies), T.
Clausen (hormonal control), A.B. Maunsbach and E. Skriver from the Institute
of Anatomy in collaboration with P.L. Jørgensen (electron microscopy
and crystallization), and I. Plesner from the Department of Chemistry (enzyme
kinetics and evaluation of models). We also had many visitors.
We got many contacts to scientists in different parts of the world, and I spent
a good deal of time travelling giving lectures. In 1973 the first international
meeting on the Na+,K+-ATPase was held in New York. The
next was 5 years later in Århus, and thereafter every third year. The
proceedings from these meetings have been a very valuable source of information
about the development of the field.
My wife joined me on many of the tours and we got friends abroad. Apart from
the scientific inspiration the travelling also gave many cultural experiences,
symphony concerts, opera and ballet, visits to Cuzco and Machu Picchu in Peru,
to Uxmal and Chichén Itzá on the Yucatan Peninsula, and to museums
in many different countries. Not to speak of the architectural experiences from
seeing many different parts of the world. And not least it gave us good friends.
It is not always easy to keep your papers in order when travelling. Sitting
in the airport in Moscow in the 1960s waiting for departure to Khabarovsk in
the eastern part of Siberia, we--three Danes on our way to a meeting in Tokyo--realized
that we had forgotten our passports at the hotel in town. There were twenty
minutes to departure and no way to get the passports in time. We asked Intourist
what to do. There was only one boat connection a week from Nakhodka, where we
should embark to Yokohama, so they suggested that we should go on, they would
send the passports after us. I had once had a nightmare, that I should end my
days in Siberia. When we after an overnight flight arrived in Khabarovsk we
were met by a lady who asked if we were the gentlemen without passports. We
could not deny, and she told us that they would not arrive until after we had
left Khabarovsk by train to Nakhodka. But they would send them by plane to Vladivostok
and from there by car to Nakhodka. To our question if we could leave Siberia
without our passports the answer was no. When the train the following morning
stopped in Nakhodka, a man came into the sleeping car and asked if we were the
gentlemen without passports. To our "yes" he said "here you are", and handed
over the passports. Amazing. We had an uncomplicated boat trip to Yokohama.
It was not as easy some years later in Argentina. I had been at a meeting in
Mendoza, had stopped in Cordoba on the way, had showed passport in and out of
the airports without problems. Returning to Buenos Aires to leave for New York,
the man at the counter told me that my passport had expired three months earlier,
and according to rules I had to return direct to my home country. I argued that
I was sure I could get into the U.S., but he would not give way. We discussed
for half an hour. Finally shortly before departure he would let me go to New
York if he could reserve a plane out of New York to Denmark immediately after
my arrival. He did the reservation, put a label on my ticket with the time of
departure, and by the second call for departure I rushed off, hearing him saying
"You can always remove the label". In New York, I stepped to the rear end of
the line, hoping the man at the counter would be
tired when it was my turn.
He was not. I asked if I had to return to Denmark. "There is always a way out"
was his answer, "No, go to the other counter, sign some papers, pay 5 dollars,
and I let you in".
In 1977, I was offered the chair of Biophysics at the medical faculty. It was
a smaller department, with 7 positions for scientists, of which 5 were empty,
which meant that we could get positions for I. Klodos and M. Esmann, who had
fellowships. Besides J. G. Nørby and L. Plesner moved with us. The two
members in the Institute, M. J. Mulvany and F. Cornelius became interested in
the connection between pump activity and vasoconstriction, and reconstitution
of the enzyme into liposomes, respectively, i.e. all in the institute worked
on different sides of the same problem, the structure and function of the Na+,K+-ATPase.
We got more space, less administration, and I was free of teaching obligations.
We all got along very well, lived in a relaxed atmosphere, inspiring and helping
each other, cooperating, also with the Na+,K+-ATPase colleagues
left in the Physiological Institute. And even if we all worked on different
sides of the same problem, there were never problems of interfering in each
others subjects, or about priority.
In 1988, I retired, kept my office, gave up systematic experimental work and
started to work on kinetic models for the overall reaction of the pump on computer.
For this I had to learn how to programme, quite interesting, and amazing what
you can do with a computer from the point of view of handling even complicated
models. And even if my working hours are fewer, being free of all obligations,
the time I spent on scientific problems are about the same as before my retirement.
I enjoy no longer having a meeting calendar, I enjoy to go fly-fishing when
the weather is right, and enjoy spending a lot of
time with my grandchildren.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1997, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1998
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.