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STARLING REVIEW | ![]() |
Department of Physiology, Department of Basic Medical Science, St Georges Hospital Medical School, Tooting, London SW17 0RE, UK
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to J Henderson; Email: saffron{at}sghms.ac.uk)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Claude Bernard, in 1855, is usually held responsible for the term internal secretion, a phrase that he used to describe the release of glucose from liver glycogen. It is likely that the phrase existed in the French and German literature long before Bernard (Medvei 1982), but Bernards demonstration was so convincing and clear-cut that he is given the credit for internal secretion. Unfortunately, the rest of the world borrowed the expression, and used it for the passage of any molecule (including carbon dioxide) from tissues into blood (see information on Schäfer below).
Disordered function of the blood-glands was first described from careful clinical observation. Thus, Thomas Addison (1855) described a syndrome that he associated with disease of the suprarenal glands, with the patients suffering from weakness, vomiting and skin pigmentation. When the London Medico-Chirurgical Society would not publish his findings in its Transactions, poor Addison a manic depressive committed suicide. The Anglo-French-American physician, Charles Brown-Séquard (of whom more later) demonstrated that removal of the adrenals in experimental animals was invariably fatal; no distinction was drawn between adrenal cortex and medulla at that time.
In the 1870s, syndromes associated with over or under activity of the thyroid gland were described and a host of eponyms came into being, describing many aspects of human thyroid disease. But biochemistry hardly existed, so no chemical rationale could be offered for either adrenal or thyroid disorders.
Brown-Séquard (who was simultaneously on the staff of the Hospital for Nervous Diseases at Queen Square and a Professor of Medicine at the College de France) proposed that testicular extracts had a rejuvenating effect in man, for he had tried them on himself (he was 72 at the time). He went on to claim that almost any sort of illness would respond to testicular extracts; moreover, every organ in the body produced an agent with a possible therapeutic use. An article about him in the British Medical Journal was appropriately called The Pentacle of Rejuvenescence, Pentacle being a symbol used in magic (Annotation (anonymous) 1889). But Brown-Séquards bizarre ideas were made respectable by giving them a title, organotherapy, and it seemed to be welcomed by physicians on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1891, Victor Horsley, a pioneer neurosurgeon, and his pupil, George Murray, showed that hypothyroid (myxoedematous) patients could be successfully treated with thyroid extracts a landmark in real endocrinology. BrownSéquard saw this as a vindication of his ideas. He wrote in the British Medical Journal in 1893: The great movement in therapeutics as regards the organic liquid extracts has its origin in the experiments which I made on myself in 1889, experiments which were at first so completely misunderstood[!] (Brown-Séquard 1893). In the market place, organotherapy extracts borrowed a ride alongside more respectable animal products, such as thyroid extracts, and tetanus and diphtheria antitoxins. Fortunately, by the turn of the century organotherapy had virtually disappeared (Borell 1976).
It is possible that Brown-Séquards obsession with tissue extracts actually had some benefit. Thus in 1893, George Oliver, a spa physician working in Harrogate, was making extracts of adrenals, believing that they might raise blood pressure and be of use in patients with low blood pressure. (It is not clear why Oliver believed there to be a connection between the adrenals and blood pressure an important gap in the story.) He gave some extract to his own son, and using a device of his own invention (an arteriometer) showed that his sons brachial artery narrowed under the influence of the injection. Unfortunately, Oliver did not have a blood pressure measurer, so he took some of his extract to Edward Schäfer, Professor of Physiology at University College, London (UCL). We have a description of the meeting from Henry Dale: Oliver went to tell Professor Schäfer what he thought he had observed, and found him engaged in an experiment in which the blood pressure of a dog was being recorded: found him, not unnaturally, incredulous about Olivers story and very impatient at the interruption. But Oliver was in no hurry, and urged only that a dose of his adrenal extract, which he produced from his pocket, should be injected into a vein when Schäfers own experiment was finished. And so, just to convince Oliver that it was all nonsense, Schäfer gave the injection, and then stood amazed to see the mercury mounting in the manometer til the recording float was lifted almost out of the distal limb . . .. (Dale 1948).
Schäfer was perhaps the first serious laboratory scientist to involve himself with the endocrine system. He and Oliver studied, in detail, the effects of adrenal extracts on blood pressure; it was the adrenal medulla (not the cortex) that gave rise to the pressor effect. They went on to show (in 1895; Schäfer 1895) that extracts of the pituitary caused a rise in blood pressure, and thyroid extracts caused a fall. Schäfer was sceptical about clinical observation as a basis for the science of endocrinology, and had little time for Brown-Séquards fantasies.
In an important address to the British Medical Association in 1895, he gave a contemporary review of all that was known about internal secretions. But it seems that organotherapy had somehow kept its hold, for we find: Every part of the body does, in fact, take up materials from the blood, and does transform these into other materials. Having thus transformed them, they are ultimately returned into the circulating fluid and in that sense every tissue and organ of the body furnishes an internal secretion.
He went on to give precise summaries of what was known of the internal secretions of the pancreas, liver, thyroid, pituitary, and (naturally) adrenals. He made no mention of the testes or ovaries. Schäfer was, incidentally, known as a man with rather a short fuse, and his Internal Secretions address must have been given in rather a strained atmosphere, for a footnote says: Professor Schäfer intended to illustrate his address by lantern slides, but the hall being unsuitable for this, he gave his audience a good idea of his meaning by tracing the curves with his finger.
| The arrival of Starling |
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Bayliss and Starling did not seem to bear any grudge against Pavlov. When the Bolshevik revolution of 1919 threatened to make his life impossible in Russia, the two Londoners went to great lengths to help him and his family move to England or America. But Pavlovs subsequent research (conditioned reflexes) turned out to be so in keeping with the principles of dialectical materialism that he was allowed to stay in Russia, living a life of comfort, until his death in 1936. Incidentally, it can be argued that Pavlovs abrupt change of direction in his research was a direct consequence of the discovery of secretin (Todes 2002).
Starling and his colleagues at UCL investigated (as best they could, for biochemistry was a very young subject) the nature of secretin. The working hypothesis was that the substance existed in the wall of the small intestine as a precursor (pro-secretin) which released secretin under the influence of acid. The concentration of pro-secretin diminishes steadily as one moves down the intestine. Bayliss and Starling showed that it was a universal stimulant secretin from one species would stimulate the pancreas of any other species. The evolution of this mechanism is, therefore, to be sought at some time anterior to the development of vertebrates wrote Starling. (We must remember that the literature still existed without using the word hormone.) It is also worth pointing out that secretin, a significant internal secretion, came from the wall of the intestine and not from a recognized internally secreting gland.
So, in the first decade of the twentieth century, physiologists had two internal secretions of scientific respectability adrenaline (adrenin, epinephrine) and secretin. The word endocrinology appeared at this time (there seemed to be no need for the term exocrinology). Probably because of the discovery of secretin, Starling was asked to give the Croonian Lecture to the Royal Society in March 1904 (Starling 1904). The lecture, The Chemical Regulation of the Secretory Process, updated Schäfers internal secretion lecture of nine years before. Starling concentrated on the two obvious substances. This evidence, slight though it is, points to secretin being a body of relatively small molecular weight and not a colloid. It may be compared to the active principle of the suprarenal glands, adrenalin, which has been obtained in a crystalline form and the chemical constitution of which has been approximately determined. This is indeed what one would expect of a substance which has to be turned out into the blood at repeated intervals in order to produce in some distant organ or organs a physiological response proportional to the dose. (This quantitative thinking seems more sophisticated than that from any other contemporary writer on the subject).
Physiologists seemed particularly impressed with secretin as an internal secretion with a drug-like action (we have to resist using the word hormone). Secretins precise origin and action seemed more intellectually satisfying than adrenalins rather poorly defined role (Cannons fight-or-flight function for adrenalin did not come on to the scene for another ten years or so).
In 1905, Starling was invited to give the Croonian Lectures of the Royal College of Physicians (Starling 1905a-d) (this is slightly confusing for as we have seen above he had given a Croonian lecture to the Royal Society in the previous year). There were four lectures in which he reviewed the whole endocrinological scene including a lot of his own work. Lecture 1 was The Chemical Control of the Functions of the Body. He begins by outlining nervous control, but points out that chemical control of which little is known is probably more extensive than nervous control, and is the only means of internal communication in plants and lower animals. Then, out of nowhere, comes the sentence: These chemical messengers, however, or hormones (from ó
µá
, I excite or arouse) as we might call them, have to be carried from the organ where they are produced to the organ which they affect by means of the blood stream and the continually recurring physiological needs of the organism must determine their repeated production and circulation throughout the body. (my italics) (see Fig. 2
).
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So where did Starling get the word in the first place? We have one remarkable clue. Joseph Needham, distinguished Cambridge biochemist and Chinese scholar, wrote a book of essays in 1936 entitled Order and Life. On page 80, he uses the word hormone, and refers to it in a footnote. It seems that Starling was dining in Caius College, Cambridge (where Needham was a fellow) and was in conversation with William Hardy, who had invited Starling to dinner. Hardy was a distinguished biologist, and the two decided that they needed a word for an agent released into the blood stream that stimulated activity in a different part of the body. They turned to a classical colleague, W T Vesey (an authority on the Greek poet, Pindar) and asked him. He produced the Greek verb for excite or arouse (ormao) and, to quote Needham The deed was done. Starling presumably jotted it down in his pocket-book and the word made its first appearance in his Croonian lecture, as we saw above. The exact interval between the dinner in Caius College and the appearance of hormone is not known, for Needham gives us no date in his footnote. In fact, the footnote implies that Needham was not actually there himself on the evening, but had heard the story from one of the diners. And that is all we know of the origin of the hundred-year-old word that we take so much for granted.
| References |
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Albright F 1943 Introduction to the diseases of the ductless glands. In Textbook of Medicine, 6th edn. Eds RL Cecil & RF Loeb. Philadelphia, London: WB Saunders.
Annotation (anonymous) 1889 The Pentacle of Rejuvenescence. British Medical Journal 1 1416.
Babkin BP 1951 Pavlov a Biography. London: Gollancz.
Bayliss WM & Starling EH 1901 The movements and innervation of the small intestine. Journal of Physiology 26 125138.
Bayliss WM & Starling EH 1902 The mechanism of pancreatic secretion. Journal of Physiology 28 325353.
Bernard C 1855 Remarques sur le sécrétion du sucre dans la foie, faites à loccasion de la communication de M Lehman. Comptes rendus Academies de Sciences 40 589592.
Borell M 1976 Brown-Séquards organotherapy and its appearance in America at the end of the nineteenth century. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 50 309320.[Medline]
Brown-Séquard CE 1889 Du role physiologique et therapeutique dun suc extrait de testicules danimaux dapres nombres de faits observe chez lhomme. Archives de Physiologie Normale et Pathologiques (5e ser) 1 739746.
Brown-Séquard CE 1893 On a new therapeutic method consisting of the use of organic liquids extracted from glands and other organs. British Medical Journal 2 11451147; 12121214.
Carpenter WB 1852 Cyclopedia of Anatomy and Physiology, vol IV, p 440. Ed. RB Todd. London.
Dale HH 1948 Accident and opportunism in medical research. British Medical Journal 2 451455.
Medvei VC 1982 A History of Endocrinology, p 223. London: MTP Press Ltd.
Needham J 1936 Order and Life. Cambridge: University Press.
Pavlov IP 1904 The Physiology of Digestion, pp 141155. Nobel Lecture (Physiology or Medicine). Amsterdam: Elsevier.
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Starling EH 1904 The chemical regulation of the secretory process (Croonian Lecture to the Royal Society). Proceedings of the Royal Society 73B 310322.
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Starling EH 1905d Croonian Lecture: On the chemical correlation of the functions of the body IV. Lancet 2 579583.
Todes D 2002 Pavlovs Physiology Factory, p 242. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins Press.
Received 22 September 2004
Accepted 11 October 2004
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