The legacy of Hans Selye and the origins of stress research: A retrospective 75 years after his landmark brief “Letter” to the Editor# of Nature

Hans Selye's single author short letter to Nature (1936, 138(3479):32) inspired a huge and still growing wave of medical research. His experiments with rats led to recognition of the “general adaptation syndrome”, later renamed by Selye “stress response”: the triad of enlarged adrenal glands, lymph node and thymic atrophy, and gastric erosions/ulcers. Because of the major role of glucocorticoids (named by Selye), he performed extensive structure–activity studies in the 1930s–1940s, resulting in the first rational classification of steroid hormones, e.g. corticoids, testoids/androgens, and folliculoids/estrogens. During those years, he recognized the respective anti- and pro-inflammatory actions of gluco- and mineralocorticoids in animal models, several years before demonstration of anti-rheumatic actions of cortisone and adrenocorticotrophic hormones in patients. Nevertheless, Selye did not receive a Nobel Prize, which was awarded in 1950 to the clinician Hench and the two chemists who isolated and synthesized some of the glucocorticoids. Nonetheless, Selye was internationally recognized as a world authority in endocrinology, steroid chemistry, experimental surgery, and pathology. He wrote over 1500 original and review articles, singly authored 32 books, and trained 40 PhD students, one of whom (Roger Guillemin) won a Nobel Prize for isolating the hypothalamic releasing factors/hormones. Here, we consider the main implications of his first article launching the biological stress concept and the key ideas and problems that occupied him. Selye considered “Stress in heath and disease is medically, sociologically, and philosophically the most meaningful subject for humanity that I can think of”. #In 1936 ‘Letters to Editor’ were equivalent to ‘Letters’ as more recently published in Nature as original short scientific papers.

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[2]  S. Szabó,et al.  Duodenal ulcers produced by propionitril in rats. , 1972, Archives of pathology.

[3]  H. Selye,et al.  Changes Produced by Desoxycorticosterone Overdosage in the Rat.∗ , 1940 .

[4]  S. Szabó,et al.  From Cysteamine to MPTP: Structure-Activity Studies with Duodenal Ulcerogens , 1988, Toxicologic pathology.

[5]  R Guillemin,et al.  Peptides in the brain: the new endocrinology of the neuron. , 1978, Science.

[6]  H. Selye CORRELATIONS BETWEEN THE CHEMICAL STRUCTURE AND THE PHARMACOLOGICAL ACTIONS OF THE STEROIDS1 , 1942 .

[7]  H. Selye Pharmacological Classification of Steroid Hormones , 1941, Nature.

[8]  Lofland Hb Animal model of human disease. , 1975, The American journal of pathology.

[9]  J. Dear,et al.  Calciphylaxis , 2003, The Lancet.

[10]  H. Selye,et al.  TREATMENT OF WOUND SHOCK WITH CORTICOSTERONE , 1940 .

[11]  H. Selye,et al.  The Physiology and Pathology of Exposure to Stress. A Treatise Based on the Concept of the General Adaptation Syndrome and the Diseases of Adaptation , 1946, Medicine illustrated.

[12]  H. Selye A Syndrome produced by Diverse Nocuous Agents , 1936, Nature.

[13]  H. Selye,et al.  FURTHER STUDIES CONCERNING THE OVERT AND MASKED ACTIONS OF STEROIDS , 1943 .

[14]  H. Selye Catatoxic steroids. , 1970, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[15]  S. Szabó,et al.  Effect of various steroids and ACTH on plasma levels of zoxazolamine and dicumarol. , 1973, Journal of pharmaceutical sciences.

[16]  H. Selye THE STORY OF THE ADAPTATION SYNDROME , 1952 .

[17]  H. Selye ON THE HORMONAL ACTIVITY OF A STEROID COMPOUND. , 1941, Science.

[18]  Hans Selye,et al.  The stress of my life: A scientist's memoirs , 1977 .

[19]  C. P. Leblond,et al.  HORMONAL PRODUCTION OF ARTHRITIS , 1944 .

[20]  H. Selye From Dream to Discovery: On Being a Scientist , 1975 .

[21]  H. Selye Production of Nephrosclerosis by Overdosage with Desoxycorticosterone Acetate. , 1942, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[22]  B. Solymoss,et al.  Increased Hepatic Microsomal Activity Induced by Spironolactone and Other Steroids 1 , 1969, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[23]  H. Selye,et al.  Digitoxin Poisoning: Prevention by Spironolactone , 1969, Science.

[24]  Sándor P. Szabó Hans Selye and the Development of the Stress Concept a : Special Reference to Gastroduodenal Ulcerogenesis , 1998, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[25]  L. Levi The psychosocial environment and psychosomatic diseases , 1971 .

[26]  H. Selye,et al.  Pathogenetical Correlations between Periarteritis Nodosa, Renal Hypertension and Rheumatic Lesions. , 1943, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[27]  Walter C. Alvarez From Dream to Discovery. , 1965 .

[28]  Z. J. Lipowski The Psychosocial Environment and Psychosomatic Disease , 1973 .

[29]  H. Selye An Attempt at a Natural Classification of the Steroids , 1943, Nature.

[30]  H. Selye Effect of ACTH and cortisone upon an anaphylactoid reaction. , 1949, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[31]  H. Selye,et al.  ON THE THERAPEUTIC VALUE OF ADRENAL CORTICAL HORMONES IN TRAUMATIC SHOCK AND ALLIED CONDITIONS. , 1940, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[32]  Levi Lennart,et al.  Society, stress, and disease. , 1977, WHO chronicle.

[33]  F. Braceland THE STRESS OF LIFE , 1976 .

[34]  Francesina R. Jackson Outliers: The Story of Success , 2009 .

[35]  H. Selye,et al.  [Stress without distress]. , 1976, Bruxelles medical.

[36]  H. Selye Factors influencing development of scrotum , 1943 .

[37]  R. G. Harrison Relation of the adrenal cortex to arthritis. , 1946, Lancet.

[38]  K. Kovács,et al.  Spironolactone-induced proliferation of smooth-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum in the liver of rats , 1970, Zeitschrift fur die gesamte experimentelle Medizin einschliesslich experimentelle Chirurgie.

[39]  J. Bienenstock,et al.  Mast cells , 2004, Springer Seminars in Immunopathology.

[40]  Dr. S. Szabo Half a century of stress research: a tribute to Hans Selye by his students and associates , 1985, Experientia.

[41]  H. Selye Hormones and resistance. , 1970, Journal of pharmaceutical sciences.

[42]  H. Selye,et al.  Jejunal ulcers produced by indomethacin , 1969, The Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology.

[43]  W. Cannon,et al.  THE EMERGENCY FUNCTION OF THE ADRENAL MEDULLA IN PAIN AND THE MAJOR EMOTIONS , 1914 .

[44]  H. Lofland Animal model of human disease. , 1975, The American journal of pathology.

[45]  H. Selye Experimental Cardiovascular Diseases , 1970 .

[46]  H. Selye PERFORATED PEPTIC ULCER DURING AIR-RAID , 1943 .

[47]  S. Szabó,et al.  Experimental Model for Production of Perforating Duodenal Ulcers by Cysteamine in the Rat , 1973, Nature.

[48]  S. Szabó Duodenal ulcer disease. Animal model: cysteamine-induced acute and chronic duodenal ulcer in the rat. , 1978, The American journal of pathology.