While working in Marseille, Dische discovered that glucose phosphorylation in human blood cells is inhibited by phosphoglycerates, a very surprising result as these are not the initial products of the
hexokinase reaction, which catalyses the phosphorylation of glucose by ATP. This was the first report of
feedback inhibition of a metabolic pathway, now recognized as a major mechanism of metabolic regulation. Moreover, Dische realized from the outset that this was more than just a curious observation, but one with implications for metabolic regulation, as now universally understood. Unfortunately, however, he was working in very difficult conditions as a Jewish refugee during wartime. Not only that, he published his results in French in a journal that was very little read and has now disappeared. As a consequence his paper passed almost unnoticed, though it was discussed favourably by
Earl Stadtman, one of the most prominent biochemists of the US in the post-war years: Others, including Georges Cohen and
Jacques Monod and colleagues, made similar assessments of Dische's contribution. Nonetheless, despite these positive assessments by leading biochemists of the time, the discovery of feedback regulation is almost always attributed to two much more recent reports. Much later
Edwin Umbarger, the author of one of these papers, wrote in a retrospective article that none of the people working on metabolic regulation in bacteria had been aware of Dische's work: Dische himself had earlier published a retrospective article about his discovery. == Research on ophthalmology ==