Nobel Lectures

3 September 2018
26 March 2025

Every year, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awards the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Angewandte Chemie has published the Laureates' lectures in English regularly since 1981 and in German since 1955, and occasionally those in Physics or Medicine/Physiology.

Note that lectures are typically published the year following the award.

2025

Click Chemistry: The Certainty of Chance (Nobel Lecture)

Click Chemistry: The Certainty of Chance (Nobel Lecture)**

The click chemist's playground: The most important certainty-of-chance outcome of click chemistry was the realization that perfect reactions can exist. Chemistry is about bond-making and bond-breaking reactions between atoms and molecules. So, the emergence of “perfect reaction” status promises to be transformative to the very heart of chemistry, and thence to the range of benefits for mankind that its future evolution may hold.

2019

Free Access

Innovation by Evolution: Bringing New Chemistry to Life (Nobel Lecture)

Innovation by Evolution: Bringing New Chemistry to Life (Nobel Lecture)

The directed evolution of enzymes is now routinely used to develop new catalysts with various applications, such as in environmentally friendly production of chemicals and renewable fuels. In her Nobel lecture, F. Arnold describes how lessons from nature inspired the development of methods for directed evolution.

Free Access

Phage Display: Simple Evolution in a Petri Dish (Nobel Lecture)

Phage Display: Simple Evolution in a Petri Dish (Nobel Lecture)

Playing with evolution: In his Nobel lecture, George P. Smith reconstructs the story of the phage-display idea as he personally experienced it. The development of this technique is a case study in how a scientific advance emerges gradually in incremental steps within overlapping global scientific communities.

Free Access

Harnessing Evolution to Make Medicines (Nobel Lecture)

Harnessing Evolution to Make Medicines (Nobel Lecture)

Antibody libraries and phage display have provided the key elements for the creation of a fast evolutionary system for the generation of fully human antibody medicines. Important steps leading to this development are outlined by G. Winter in his Nobel lecture.

2018

Circadian Rhythms and the Transcriptional Feedback Loop (Nobel Lecture)

Circadian Rhythms and the Transcriptional Feedback Loop (Nobel Lecture)**

Circadian rhythms are present in most if not all animals, plants, and even photosynthetic cyanobacteria. These cyanobacterial clocks as well as plant clocks are very different from those of animals, with no credible homology between the different clock proteins. Therefore circadian rhythms probably emerged multiple times in evolution, which underscores their importance.

Time Travels: A 40-Year Journey from Drosophila's Clock Mutants to Human Circadian Disorders (Nobel Lecture)

Time Travels: A 40-Year Journey from Drosophila's Clock Mutants to Human Circadian Disorders (Nobel Lecture)

Living organisms have a biological clock that helps to prepare our physiology for the fluctuations of the day. Key research to elucidate the biological mechanisms of this regular adaptation, referred to as the circadian rhythm, is described by M. W. Young in his Nobel lecture.

On the Development of Electron Cryo-Microscopy (Nobel Lecture)

On the Development of Electron Cryo-Microscopy (Nobel Lecture)

An electron microscope must operate under vacuum which means that any observed biological specimen must be dry. When water is removed, however, the molecules stick to each other. J. Dubochet describes in his Nobel lecture the solution to this dilemma that paved the way to electron-cryo microscopy: suspension of the specimen in vitrifying water.

Free Access

Single-Particle Reconstruction of Biological Molecules—Story in a Sample (Nobel Lecture)

Single-Particle Reconstruction of Biological Molecules—Story in a Sample (Nobel Lecture)

Pictures tell a thousand words: The development of single-particle cryo-electron microscopy set the stage for high-resolution structure determination of biological molecules. In his Nobel lecture, J. Frank describes the ground-breaking discoveries that have enabled the development of cryo-EM. The method has taken biochemistry into a new era.

From Electron Crystallography to Single Particle CryoEM (Nobel Lecture)

From Electron Crystallography to Single Particle CryoEM (Nobel Lecture)

Pictures are a key to knowledge: The development of electron microscopy from its beginnings to modern single particle cryo-EM is described by R. Henderson in his Nobel lecture. Shown is the first projection structure at 7 Å resolution of the purple membrane from October 1974.

2017

Free Access

Mechanically Interlocked Molecules (MIMs)—Molecular Shuttles, Switches, and Machines (Nobel Lecture)

Mechanically Interlocked Molecules (MIMs)—Molecular Shuttles, Switches, and Machines (Nobel Lecture)

Chemistry welcomes a new bond: The mechanical bond has endowed molecules with component parts whose movements can be controlled and monitored. In his Nobel Lecture, J. F. Stoddart describes how being able to template the formation of mechanically interlocked molecules has led to the design and synthesis of shuttles, switches, and machines at the nanoscale.

Free Access

From Chemical Topology to Molecular Machines (Nobel Lecture)

From Chemical Topology to Molecular Machines (Nobel Lecture)

Magic rings: The field of molecular machines has its origins in the synthesis of catenanes and rotaxanes. J.-P. Sauvage describes in his Nobel Lecture the beginnings of this research and the developments that led to the first molecular muscles and machines whose movement can be directed “from the outside” in a controlled manner.

Free Access

The Art of Building Small: From Molecular Switches to Motors (Nobel Lecture)

The Art of Building Small: From Molecular Switches to Motors (Nobel Lecture)

A journey into the nano-world: The ability to design, use and control motor-like functions at the molecular level sets the stage for numerous dynamic molecular systems. In his Nobel Lecture, B. L. Feringa describes the evolution of the field of molecular motors and explains how to program and control molecules by incorporating responsive and adaptive properties.

2016

Artemisinin—A Gift from Traditional Chinese Medicine to the World (Nobel Lecture)

Artemisinin—A Gift from Traditional Chinese Medicine to the World (Nobel Lecture)

Malaria has long been a devastating and life-threatening global epidemic disease in human history. Artemisinin, the active substance against malaria, was first isolated and tested in the 1970s in China. The important role played by traditional Chinese medicine in the discovery of artemisinin is described by Y. Tu in her Nobel Lecture.

A Splendid Gift from the Earth: The Origins and Impact of the Avermectins (Nobel Lecture)

A Splendid Gift from the Earth: The Origins and Impact of the Avermectins (Nobel Lecture)

Japanese soil was the origin of one of the most important drugs of the world: ivermectin. No other drug has such importance for the health of millions of people, particularly in the poor regions of the world. The discovery of the parent compounds of the avermectines is described first hand by S. Ōmura.

Ivermectin: A Reflection on Simplicity (Nobel Lecture)

Ivermectin: A Reflection on Simplicity (Nobel Lecture)

Parasitic diseases including river blindness and lymphatic filariasis affect hundreds of millions of people annually. The discovery of the drug ivermectin has provided humankind with a powerful new means to combat these severe diseases. To a very large extent the drug was brought about by “simple” science.

The Intrinsic Fragility of DNA (Nobel Lecture)

The Intrinsic Fragility of DNA (Nobel Lecture)

Our cells contain common molecules, such as water or oxygen, that can damage DNA. In his studies Tomas Lindahl has shown how specific repair enzymes remove and replace damaged parts of DNA in a process of vital importance.

Mechanisms of DNA Repair by Photolyase and Excision Nuclease (Nobel Lecture)

Mechanisms of DNA Repair by Photolyase and Excision Nuclease (Nobel Lecture)

Ultraviolet light damages DNA by converting two adjacent thymines into a thymine dimer which is potentially mutagenic, carcinogenic, or lethal to the organism. This damage is repaired by photolyase and the nucleotide excision repair system in E. coli by nucleotide excision repair in humans. The work leading to these results is presented by Aziz Sancar in his Nobel Lecture.

Mechanisms in E. coli and Human Mismatch Repair (Nobel Lecture)

Mechanisms in E. coli and Human Mismatch Repair (Nobel Lecture)

DNA molecules are not completely stable, they are subject to chemical or photochemical damage and errors that occur during DNA replication resulting in mismatched base pairs. Through mechanistic studies Paul Modrich showed how replication errors are corrected by strand-directed mismatch repair in Escherichia coli and human cells.

2015

Single-Molecule Spectroscopy, Imaging, and Photocontrol: Foundations for Super-Resolution Microscopy (Nobel Lecture)

Single-Molecule Spectroscopy, Imaging, and Photocontrol: Foundations for Super-Resolution Microscopy (Nobel Lecture)

In the early 90s, many fascinating physical effects were observed when ensemble averaging was removed to allow study of individual molecules. The imaging of single molecules as well as observations of spectral diffusion, optical switching, and the ability to select different single molecules in the same focal volume by tuning the pumping laser frequency provided important forerunners of the later super-resolution microscopy with single molecules.

Nanoscopy with Focused Light (Nobel Lecture)

Nanoscopy with Focused Light (Nobel Lecture)

A picture is worth a thousand words—This doesn't only apply to everyday life but also to the natural sciences. It is, therefore, probably not by chance that the historical beginning of modern natural sciences very much coincides with the invention of light microscopy. S. W. Hell shows in his Nobel Lecture that the diffraction resolution barrier has been overcome by using molecular state transitions (e.g. on/off) to make nearby molecules transiently discernible.