History of Insulin

  • 100

    Diabetes first described

    The condition is described by Arataeus of Cappadocia
  • Sweet smell of diabetic urine documented

    Thomas Willis, an Oxford physician, discovered this
  • First attempt at treatment

    John Rollo treats a patient through dietary restriction.
  • Death of Claude Bernard

    Claude Bernard discovered that the liver stored glycogen and that it secreted a sugary substance into blood. Bernard theorized that this substance caused diabetes.
  • Von Mering disproves Bernard's theory

    Von Mering found that the removal of the pancreas caused diabetes. He and his partner attempted to extract an antidiabetic substance from the pancreas.
  • Frederick Banting discovers insulin

    Banting, an orthopedic surgeon, worked together with J.J.R. Macloud, Charles Best, and J.B. Collip to extract a substance from an atrophied dog pancreas that kept a diabetic dog alive.
  • First human patient receives insulin

    A 14-year-old boy receives the newly discovered insulin. Unfortunately, it failed.
  • Purified injections now available

    These worked, unlike the original formula.
  • Insulin now produced commercially

    Most western countries have reliable access to insulin.
  • Insulin crystallized

    It was crystallized by J.J. Abel. Insulin has two chains of 51 amino acids. He received the Nobel Prize for his efforts.
  • Insulin improved

    Protamine zinc insulin was created to replace the earlier, less reliable form.
  • Insulin improved... again

    Lente insulin is synthesized simply as a better form of insulin.
  • Immunoassay improves research

    This improvement allowed minute concentrations of insulin to be measured, paving the way for future advancements.
  • Three-dimensional structure of insulin discovered

    Dorothy Hodgin won the Nobel Prize for her discovery.