Otto Meyerhof lecture series
The University of Heidelberg is hosting named after Nobel Prize–winning biochemist Otto Meyerhof. It will be streaming from May 31 through July 19.
Meyerhof studied cellular oxidation and heat production — in other words, metabolism.

Working with physiologist A.V. Hill, he studied energy cycling in frog muscle cells, discovering that lactic acid fermentation had a predictable relationship with oxygen availability. When oxygen was absent, glycogen was converted into lactic acid, whereas when oxygen was abundant, little lactic acid fermentation occurred. The pair earned the 1922 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for the work.
Through the 1920s and 1930s, Meyerhof continued to investigate the mechanisms of glycolysis, discovering over a third of the enzymes we now know are involved in glycogen breakdown. Along the way, his group also found that phosphorylated molecules (such as ATP) are rich in energy, laying the groundwork for our modern appreciation of ATP as a cellular energy carrier.
He became a director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research at Heidelberg in 1929 but was forced out in 1938 as antisemitism grew. To escape the Nazi regime, he moved his family to Paris but then had to flee again.
According to , “Eventually, with the help of the Unitarian Service Committee, he reached Spain and ultimately, in October 1940, the United States,” where he had a professorship waiting for him at the University of Pennsylvania. Fittingly, the forthcoming lecture series’ theme is “A scientist’s life between honor and exile.”
The series, which will be subtitled in English, will begin with a biographical talk by , a physician and researcher at Heidelberg. Other talks by scholars will cover antisemitism at the university, Jewish communities in Germany and modern-day antisemitism.
David Meyerhof, the biochemist’s grandson and a retired science, technology, engineering and mathematics educator, provided a written statement to be shared at the start of event. It reads, in part: “He never stopped working, despite the tremendous hardships that he and his family endured while escaping from the Nazis during World War II and surviving the Holocaust. He said, ‘Whatever happens, they cannot reach our souls.’”
Otto Meyerhof died in 1951 at age 67. You can read more about his research in a .
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