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Ulf Svante von Euler (7 February 1905 – 9 March 1983) was a Swedish physiologist and pharmacologist. He won a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1970 for his work on neurotransmitters. Ulf S. von Euler was born in Stockholm, the son of two noted scientists, Dr. Hans von Euler - Chelpin, a professor of chemistry, and Dr. Astrid Cleve, a professor of botany and geology. His father was German and the recipient of Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1929, and his maternal grandfather was Per Teodor Cleve, Professor of Chemistry at the Uppsala University, and the discoverer of the chemical elements thulium and holmium. His great - great - great - great grandfather was Leonhard Euler. Enjoying
such a privileged family environment in science, education and
research, it is not surprising that young Ulf would become a scientist,
too, so he went to study medicine at the Karolinska Institute in 1922. At Karolinska, he worked under Robin Fåhraeus in blood sedimentation and rheology and did research work on the pathophysiology of vasoconstriction.
He presented his doctoral thesis in 1930, and was appointed as
Assistant Professor in Pharmacology in the same year, with the support
of G. Liljestrand. From 1930 to 1931 von Ulf got a Rochester Fellowship to do his post - doctoral studies abroad. He studied in England with Sir Henry Dale in London and with I. de Burgh Daly in Birmingham, and then proceeded to the continent, studying with Corneille Heymans in Ghent, Belgium, and with Gustav Embden in Frankfurt, Germany. Von Euler liked to travel, so he also worked and learned biophysics with Archibald Vivian Hill, again in London in 1934, and neuromuscular transmission with G.L. Brown in 1938. From 1946 to 1947, he worked with Eduardo Braun - Menéndez in the Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental in Buenos Aires, which was founded by Bernardo Houssay. His unerring instinct to work with important scientific leaders and fields was to be proved by the fact that Dale, Heymans, Hill and Houssay went to receive the Nobel prize in physiology or medicine. From 1930 to 1957, von Euler was married to Jane Sodenstierna. They had four children: Hans Leo, scientist administrator at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.A.; Johan Christopher, anesthesiologist, Serafimer Hospital,
Stockholm; Ursula Katarina, Ph.D., curator at The Royal Collections,
The Royal Court, Stockholm, Sweden; and Marie Jane, Chemical Engineer, Melbourne, Australia. In 1958, von Euler married countess Dagmar Cronstedt, a radio broadcaster who had during the Second World War worked at Radio Königsberg, broadcasting German propaganda to neutral Sweden. His short stay as a postdoctoral student in Dale's laboratory was very fruitful: in 1931 he discovered with John H. Gaddum an important autopharmacological principle, substance P.
After returning to Stockholm, von Euler pursued further this line of
research, and successively discovered four other important endogenous
active substances, prostaglandin, vesiglandin (1935), piperidine (1942) and noradrenaline (1946). In
1939 von Euler was appointed Full Professor of Physiology at the
Karolinska Institute, where he remained until 1971. His early
collaboration with Liljestrand had led to an important discovery, which
was named the Euler - Liljestrand mechanism (a physiological arterialshunt in response to the decrease in local oxygenation of the lungs). From
1946 on, however, when noradrenaline was discovered, von Euler devoted
most of his research work to this area. He and his group studied
thoroughly its distribution and fate in biological tissues and then in the nervous system in physiological and pathological conditions, and found that noradrenaline was produced and stored in nerve synaptic terminals
in intracellular vesicles, a key discovery which changed dramatically
the course of many researches in the field. In 1970 he was
distinguished with the Nobel Prize for his work, jointly with Sir Bernard Katz and Julius Axelrod. Since 1953 he was very active in the Nobel Foundation,
being a member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine and
Chairman of the Board since 1965. He also served as Vice - President of
the International Union of Physiological Sciences from 1965 to 1971. Among the many honorary titles and prizes he received in addition to the Nobel, were the Gairdner Prize (1961), the Jahre Prize (1965), the Stouffer Prize (1967), the Carl Ludwig Medaille (1953), the Schmiedeberg Plaquette (1969), La Madonnina (1970),
many honorary doctorates from universities around the world, and the
membership to several erudite, medical and scientific societies. Dr. von Euler died on 9 March 1983. |