Montreal Gazette

THE DISCOVERY OF TESTOSTERO­NE

Early research involved enlisting students to extract substances from bull testicles

- JOE SCHWARCZ The Right Chemistry joe.schwarcz@mcgill.ca Joe Schwarcz is director of McGill University’s Office for Science & Society (mcgill.ca/oss). He hosts The Dr. Joe Show on CJAD Radio 800 AM every Sunday from 3 to 4 p.m.

In 1927 the Chicago stockyards were happy to strike a deal with University of Chicago chemistry professor Fred Koch to take bovine testicles off their hands. After all, “prairie oysters” had no great market value.

Koch’s intent was to study substances the testes released into the bloodstrea­m that produced effects elsewhere in the body. The term “hormone” for such chemical messengers had been coined back in 1902 by the English physiologi­sts William Bayliss and Ernest Starling from the Greek for “stir into action.” This was prompted by their discovery of “secretin,” a substance that stimulates the flow of digestive juices from the pancreas after being released by the small intestine in response to the entry of food. A half-century earlier, Arnold Adolph Berthold had unknowingl­y laid the foundation to hormone research by demonstrat­ing that a rooster’s comb withered upon castration and that re-implantati­on of a testicle into the body cavity caused the comb to flourish again.

In the 1880s, Harvard professor Charles-Édouard BrownSéqua­rd was intrigued enough by that observatio­n to inject himself with an extract produced from the testes of dogs and guinea pigs with hopes of rejuvenati­ng himself. There were some transient effects, but Brown- Séquard dropped this line of research in part due to being ridiculed by the scientific community. Long before Berthold and BrownSéqua­rd, ancient Greek athletes experiment­ed with hormones. There are accounts of some athletes in the ancient Greek Olympiads consuming sheep testicles to improve their performanc­e.

Professor Koch aimed at building on the work of his scientific predecesso­rs, and although he had plenty of bovine testes to work with, he needed hands to do the tedious extraction. Luckily, university professors are blessed with a natural resource available to them, namely, students. Koch recruited a number of them to mash the testicles, extract them with a solvent, and separate the components by column chromatogr­aphy. Eventually, from 40 pounds of testes the professor and his students managed to isolate 20 milligrams of a substance that when administer­ed to castrated roosters, pigs and rats had the effect of re-masculiniz­ing them.

Serious research on the identifica­tion of this substance had to wait until more significan­t amounts became available. That happened when pharmaceut­ical companies became interested in the therapeuti­c potential of such testicle extracts, with researcher­s at the Dutch company Organon finally managing to isolate a crystallin­e form of the hormone. They named the compound “testostero­ne,” paying homage to its origin and the fact that in terms of molecular structure it was in the “sterol” category. The exact structure of the molecule was worked out by Adolf Butenandt, then at the Schering pharmaceut­ical company. Once the structure was identified, Butenandt developed a chemical synthesis starting from cholestero­l. A similar synthesis was carried out independen­tly by Leopold Ruzicka at the Ciba company who went on to share the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1939 with Butenandt. While Butenandt made stellar contributi­ons to chemistry, including the discovery of bombykol, the pheromone of the silkworm moth, his legacy is tainted by his involvemen­t with the Nazi party.

Ruzicka had numerous other accomplish­ments before the celebrated work on steroids. His early research focused on what at the time was called “Dalmatian insect powder.” This was not face powder for insects born in Dalmatia. It was a powder with a long reputation of being an insecticid­e, made from crushed chrysanthe­mums that grew in Dalmatia, a region of Croatia. Hundreds of years earlier, the Persians had discovered that chrysanthe­mums were toxic to insects, and since then, the powdered flowers, known as Pyrethrum, were used both to kill and repel insects. Ruzicka determined that the oil contained several closely related compounds that came to be called pyrethrins, even managing to isolate and identify two of these. Pyrethrins have distinct fragrances and that led Ruzicka into perfume research, eventually determinin­g the structure of muscone and civetone, scent compounds derived from the musk deer and the civet cat. After being awarded the Nobel Prize, Ruzicka delivered a lecture summarizin­g his work with the intriguing title, “From Dalmatian Insect Powder to Sex Hormones.”

The discovery of testostero­ne led to its therapeuti­c use both for breast cancer and for the treatment of men with low levels of the hormone. Because testostero­ne also builds muscle, it has been used and abused by athletes. German athletes in the 1936 Olympics used testostero­ne for performanc­e enhancemen­t, but it was state-sponsored doping by East Germany under Soviet rule that eventually put testostero­ne and its synthetic derivative­s on the world stage. Canadians became keenly aware of the power of muscle building, or “anabolic,” steroids when Ben Johnson, who had won the gold medal in the 100 metre run at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, was stripped of his medal after the testostero­ne derivative stanozolol was found in his urine. That caused Canadian Olympic swimmer Mark Tewksbury to hang a sign in the Olympic Village with the markings, “Hero to Zero in 9.79.”

 ?? ROMEO GACAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? Canadian Ben Johnson crosses the finish line to win the Olympic 100-metre final in a world record 9.79 seconds at the 1988 at Seoul Olympics. He was stripped of his gold medal after the testostero­ne derivative stanozolol was found in his urine.
ROMEO GACAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES Canadian Ben Johnson crosses the finish line to win the Olympic 100-metre final in a world record 9.79 seconds at the 1988 at Seoul Olympics. He was stripped of his gold medal after the testostero­ne derivative stanozolol was found in his urine.
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