National Post

BIOCHEMIST’S WORK LED TO A DRUG FOR PARKINSON’S

COMMUTED BETWEEN JOBS IN TORONTO AND VIENNA

- OLEH HORNYKIEWI­CZ 1927 - 2020

Professor Oleh Hornykiewi­cz, who has died aged 93, was a biochemist who was the first to suggest a link between a lack of the chemical dopamine in the brain and the onset of Parkinson’s disease.

The fact that Hornykiewi­cz never received a Nobel Prize for his work was a cause of some outrage among neuroscien­tists. For it was thanks to his observatio­ns in the late 1950s and early 1960s that Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel — all Nobel recipients in 2000 — were able to map the signalling pathways that regulate some of the brain’s most important functions.

Hornykiewi­cz’s interest in the role of dopamine began when he joined the University Department of Pharmacolo­gy at Oxford. By experiment­ing on guinea pigs, he showed that dopamine — then considered a mere precursor to other neurotrans­mitters (chemicals governing brain function) such as adrenalin — caused a drop in blood pressure when administer­ed in the laboratory.

Having left Oxford for his hometown of Vienna, Hornykiewi­cz began studying patients who were dying of Parkinson’s. Autopsies revealed that their brains had very low dopamine levels. This observatio­n, made in 1959, became public a year later once Hornykiewi­cz and his assistant were confident they had enough corroborat­ing evidence. They also analyzed the brains of patients with neurologic­al disorders such as Huntington’s disease, finding that the lack of dopamine was specific to people with Parkinson’s.

At the same time, Carlsson and fellow Swedish researcher­s were exploring treatments. Levodopa ( L- Dopa), unlike dopamine, can pass through the network of blood vessels and tissue that protects the brain from infection. Once in the brain, it is converted into dopamine: with, as Hornykiewi­cz put it, “spectacula­r” effects.

Bed-bound patients given L-dopa from Hornykiewi­cz’s own laboratory began to move and walk; their speech improved, and some started “actually crying with joy” as the drug did its work. A film of the patients was aired at a meeting of the Medical Society of Vienna in 1961.

Though the initial response was skeptical, this footage is now considered a classic of its kind — and it had an inspiring effect upon the British neurologis­t Oliver Sacks. His “extraordin­ary summer” observing Parkinsoni­an patients’ responses to L- Dopa is recounted in Awakenings ( 1973) — later made into an acclaimed film starring Robert De Niro.

Oleh Hornykiewi­cz was born in Sychiv, Ukraine, on Nov. 17, 1926 — third son of a Catholic Ukrainian priest, Theophilus, and his wife Anna. After the German invasion of Poland the family moved to Vienna, where, to help his family learn German, Theophilus would read aloud from a state- issued copy of Hitler’s Mein Kampf — breaking off only to deplore its ideology.

Oleh attended a predominan­tly Jewish school before studying Medicine at the University of Vienna. At Oxford he worked under Hermann Blaschko, a German émigré and a world ex

‘ACTUALLY CRYING WITH JOY’ AS THE DRUG DID ITS WORK.

pert on human enzymes.

In 1967 Hornykiewi­cz left Vienna for Toronto and a position at the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry ( now the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, or CAMH). He became the University of Toronto’s professor in pharmacolo­gy and head of the department of psychophar­macology at the Clarke, commuting between jobs in Vienna and Toronto for a full decade.

In later life, much of his time was spent at the Brain Research Institute ( now the Centre for Brain Research) at the Medical University of Vienna.

He was still active, performing brain dissection­s by hand and discussing the latest neuroscien­tific ideas, into his tenth decade.

In 1979, Prof. Hornykiewi­cz received the Wolf Prize in Medicine for his work on L-dopa.

He and his wife, Christina, had four children.

 ?? RONALD ZAK / NATIONAL POSTFILES ?? Professor Oleh Hornykiewi­cz was the first to link the lack of dopamine in the brain with Parkinson’s disease.
RONALD ZAK / NATIONAL POSTFILES Professor Oleh Hornykiewi­cz was the first to link the lack of dopamine in the brain with Parkinson’s disease.

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