Fritz Markwardt
1924-2011 · German (East German / DDR) · pharmacology
Greifswald pharmacologist who in 1957 purified hirudin to homogeneity, characterized its mechanism, and laid the entire scientific foundation for the modern direct thrombin inhibitor drug class.
Profile
- Life years
- 1924-2011
- Nationality
- German (East German / DDR)
- Era
- mid 20th
- Primary field
- pharmacology
Institutional Affiliations
- Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena (Institute of Pharmacology, 1948-1965)
- Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität Greifswald (Director, Institute of Pharmacology, 1965-1990)
- German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (Member, 1972)
- Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics (collaborator, 1980s)
Key Contributions
- Achieved the first purification of hirudin to electrophoretic homogeneity in 1957 at Friedrich Schiller University Jena, later moving the program to Greifswald.
- Determined the molecular weight (~7 kDa), amino-acid composition, and isoelectric point of native hirudin — foundational data for all subsequent structural work.
- Demonstrated hirudin's mechanism of action: stoichiometric 1:1 binding to thrombin with picomolar affinity, blocking both active site and exosite I.
- Trained over 60 PhD students, building the world's largest leech-pharmacology research school at the Institut für Pharmakologie Greifswald (1965-1990).
- His work was directly licensed by Hoechst Marion Roussel and Behringwerke to develop lepirudin (Refludan), FDA-approved 1998 for HIT.
Importance to Hirudotherapy
Fritz Markwardt is the most important figure in 20th-century hirudotherapy science. His 1957 Naturwissenschaften paper, written under difficult East German laboratory conditions with limited Western reagents, achieved what Haycraft and Jacoby could only approximate: crystalline-grade hirudin. Using ion-exchange chromatography on cellulose phosphate columns — equipment Markwardt's team had to fabricate in-house — he separated hirudin from the dozens of contaminating leech proteins, then characterized its primary structure with techniques borrowed from insulin chemistry pioneered at Cambridge. Markwardt's mechanistic studies between 1958 and 1985 essentially defined the field of direct thrombin inhibition. He showed that hirudin binds thrombin with a dissociation constant of ~0.5 pM — the tightest non-covalent protein-protein interaction then known in biochemistry. He demonstrated that this binding was stoichiometric (1:1) and reversible, distinguishing hirudin from heparin's catalytic mechanism. He correctly predicted that synthetic peptide fragments of hirudin (later realized as bivalirudin) could replicate the parent molecule's pharmacology with shorter half-life and better dose-control. Every modern direct oral anticoagulant — dabigatran, argatroban, lepirudin, desirudin, bivalirudin — traces a direct intellectual lineage to Markwardt's bench. When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, Markwardt was suddenly able to collaborate openly with Western pharma. Hoechst, Bayer, and Boehringer Mannheim all sent senior scientists to Greifswald in the early 1990s. The result was the world's first recombinant hirudin (lepirudin / Refludan) approved by FDA in 1998 for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia. Markwardt lived to see his 1957 purification become the basis of a billion-dollar drug class — and at his death in 2011, the German Pharmacological Society renamed its annual anticoagulation prize the 'Fritz-Markwardt-Preis' in his honor.
Key Publications
- Die Isolierung und chemische Charakterisierung des Hirudins · Naturwissenschaften (1957)
- The Comparative Pharmacology of Hirudin and Heparin · Thrombosis Research (1970)
- Pharmacology of Recombinant Hirudin · Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis (1991) · PMID 1771415
- Hirudin as Alternative Anticoagulant — A Historical Review · Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis (2002) · PMID 12420235
- Historical perspective of the development of thrombin inhibitors · Pathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis (2002) · PMID 12811007
Notable Quotes
“Das Hirudin ist nicht nur ein Werkzeug der Wissenschaft — es ist ein Geschenk der Natur an die Hämostaseologie. (Hirudin is not merely a tool of science — it is a gift from nature to hemostaseology.)”
— Markwardt F, Greifswald inaugural lecture, 1965
“What heparin needs antithrombin to do, hirudin does alone — and that is why one day we will have hirudin in every coronary care unit.”
— Markwardt F, Sem Thromb Hemost, 1991
“After fifty years of working with this molecule, I still find new things to admire about it. Nature has not yet been improved upon.”
— Markwardt F, retirement address, Greifswald, 1990
External Resources
Influenced Research
Compounds and research areas tracing back to this figure's contributions:
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