Yahoo – AFP,
Pia Ohlin, 7 Oct 2015
Nobel
Chemistry Prize 2015 co-winners (L-R) Sweden's Tomas Lindahl, Paul
Modrich of
the US and Turkish-American Aziz Sancar (AFP Photo/Justin
Tallis / Megan Morr /
Max Eng)
|
Stockholm
(AFP) - Sweden's Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich of the United States and Aziz
Sancar, a Turkish-American, won the 2015 Nobel Chemistry Prize on Wednesday for
work on how cells repair damaged DNA.
The three
opened a dazzling frontier in medicine by unveiling how the body repairs DNA
mutations that can cause sickness and contribute to ageing, the Nobel jury
said.
"Their
systematic work has made a decisive contribution to the understanding of how
the living cell functions, as well as providing knowledge about the molecular
causes of several hereditary diseases and about mechanisms behind both cancer
development and ageing," the panel said.
DNA --
deoxyribonucleic acid -- is the chemical code for making and sustaining life.
Cells
divide, or replicate, billions of times through our lifetime.
Molecular
machines seek to copy the code perfectly, but random slipups in their work can
cause the daughter cells to die or malfunction. DNA can also be damaged by
strong sunlight and other environmental factors.
But there
is a swarm of proteins -- a molecular repair kit -- designed to monitor the
process. It proof-reads the code and repairs damage.
The three
were lauded for mapping these processes, starting with Lindahl, who identified
so-called repair enzymes -- the basics in the toolbox.
Eternal
life?
Sancar
discovered the mechanisms used by cells to fix damage by ultraviolet radiation.
Modrich laid bare a complex DNA-mending process called mismatch repair.
"The
basic research carried out by the 2015 Nobel laureates in chemistry has not
only deepened our knowledge of how we function, but could also lead to the
development of lifesaving treatments," the Nobel committee said.
With cells
able to repair themselves, one could ponder the dizzying possibility that
humans could go on living forever.
"No, I
don't believe in eternal life," Lindahl, who is based in Britain, told
reporters by telephone at the prize announcement.
He said
scientists were increasingly turning their attention away from curing diseases
such as cancer and instead looking for chronic treatments.
"We
are getting away a little bit (from) trying to find a cure for everything, and
convert diseases to something we can live with," he said.
"It's
difficult to cure diabetes but we have good ways of treating diabetic patients,
and I think with regard to DNA damage that will be an increasingly important
aspect."
DNA repair
researcher Nora Goosen of the University of Leiden in the Netherlands told AFP
scientists were looking at targeted attacks on cancer.
She said
the same mechanism by which cells repair DNA damage can also make them resist
the effects of chemotherapy. By understanding how the cell repair system works,
doctors hope they will one day be able to instruct cancerous cells not to fight
against treatment, thus making chemotherapy more effective, she explained.
Other
scientists heaped praise on Lindahl for his pioneering work.
They
included Britain's prestigious Royal Society, of which he is a fellow, and
British biochemist Sir Tim Hunt, who was a co-winner of the 2001 Nobel for cell
duplication.
Chose
studies over football
"This
is wonderful news!" Hunt told the Science Media Centre (SMC) in London.
"Tomas was my boss for almost 20 years, a real scientists' scientist...
(a) richly-deserved prize."
It is the
seventh time DNA research has been honoured with a Nobel prize. The first was
in 1962, for the discovery of the structure of DNA.
Lindahl,
Modrich and Sancar share the prize sum of eight million Swedish kronor (around
$950,000 or 855,000 euros).
Lindahl,
77, is the emeritus director of Cancer Research UK at Clare Hall Laboratory in
Britain.
Modrich was
born in 1946 and grew up in a small town in northern New Mexico, which
instilled in him a love of the natural world.
"There
was huge biological diversity around me," he said in a statement on Duke
University, where he is a professor of biochemistry.
"Within
five miles, the ecology can change dramatically -- it was very thought
provoking."
In 1963,
his father, who was the local high school biology teacher, gave him very
important advice, he recalled: "You should learn about this DNA
stuff."
Sancar, 69,
was meanwhile born in the small Turkish town of Savur. He could have become a
professional football player -- Turkey's national junior team courted him to
become their goalkeeper -- but he chose to focus on his academic studies
instead.
After working
as a doctor in the countryside, he resumed his biochemistry studies at the age
of 27, and then went to the University of Texas in Dallas.
He is now a
professor of biochemistry and biochemics at University of North Carolina in the
US.
He told the
Nobel Foundation he was stunned by his win.
"I
wasn't expecting it at all. I was very surprised."
The Nobel
awards week continues with the announcements for the two most closely-watched
prizes: on Thursday the winner of the literature prize will be announced,
followed by the peace prize on Friday.
The
economics prize wraps up this year's Nobel season on Monday.
Russian scientists find new way to repair DNA that may cure Alzheimer’s
"The Quantum Factor" – Apr 10, 2011 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Subjects: Galaxies, Universe, Intelligent design, Benevolent design, Aliens, Nikola Tesla (Quantum energy), Inter-Planetary Travel, DNA, Genes, Stem Cells, Cells, Rejuvenation, Shift of Human Consciousness, Spontaneous Remission, Religion, Dictators, Africa, China, Nuclear Power, Sustainable Development, Animals, Global Unity.. etc.) - (Text Version)
Related Articles:
Russian scientists find new way to repair DNA that may cure Alzheimer’s
"The Quantum Factor" – Apr 10, 2011 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Subjects: Galaxies, Universe, Intelligent design, Benevolent design, Aliens, Nikola Tesla (Quantum energy), Inter-Planetary Travel, DNA, Genes, Stem Cells, Cells, Rejuvenation, Shift of Human Consciousness, Spontaneous Remission, Religion, Dictators, Africa, China, Nuclear Power, Sustainable Development, Animals, Global Unity.. etc.) - (Text Version)
"... DNA is a Dynamic Molecule, not a static one.
Humanity is stuck in the 3D portion of their biological thinking. In your 3-D life, you simply accept the chemistry you're given. You act as though the three percent gene producing part is all there is. You believe it is a chemical protocol that is unchangeable and simply "you." You don't see it for the way it's designed. It's dynamic and always has been. It's not set, but will continue to simply repeat what it does unless there is another quantum influence on it.
Therefore you live with the 3 percent as though it were all there is, and since it just "came with your body" and seems to control everything, you never talk to it. Many of you come in with pre-dispositions based upon the karma which is put upon you from your past lives. You don't come in clean [without karmic energy]. Instead, you arrive with pre-dispositions, fears and phobias. Some are positive. Perhaps you come in as a prodigy continuing your last life... the 8-year-old who can paint like a master and do brushstrokes that take 30 years to develop. What does that tell you about what must be in the DNA?
Perhaps you come in as the composer, the pianist, the prodigy, the violinist, just waiting until your hands can go on the fingerboard or can reach up and fret the notes. Perhaps you come in knowing how to play the piano, just waiting for your hands to get big enough to do what you used to do... without any lessons. How do you explain that, dear ones? The answer is that all this is contained in the dynamic quantum instruction sets of your DNA... the part you never talk to it.
Cell Division - a static process?
Let me take you to the cellular division process. We've said this before, but you need to hear this to understand how it works. A cell is ready to divide. The Human body is designed to rejuvenate... all tissue. You've been told that there's some tissue that does not rejuvenate, but that is incorrect. It all rejuvenates at different speeds at different times and in different ways. It rejuvenates. So now you know that the Human body is designed to live a long time. Unfortunately, the energy that you have created on this planet and what you've gone through, has beat it up. You don't live much more than 80 years. That was not the design.
The Biblical personalities were sometimes prophets and sometimes masters and sometimes just there... and lived for hundreds of years. Did they really? Or perhaps this is that just a metaphor? Did they get that right in the Bible without a error in transcription? I'm going to tell you the truth. It's very accurate. Thousands of years ago you lived a very long time, Lemurian. If you knew your lifespan, you'd gasp. But not anymore. Instructions have been given over time to DNA, literally, by the energy of the planet... en energy that you have created through consciousness.
A cell divides. Right before it divides, it needs the blueprint to clone itself. The blueprint is available from the stem cell. The stem cell gets its information from the quantum part of the DNA, which has never changed since you were born. It's remained static, since nothing has ever changed it... and the fact that you don't believe it's changeable and have just accepted aging. There's not a conscious effort to do anything with it, and it just lays there like it always did.
The diving cell "talks" to the stem cell and says, "Do the same thing you always did? Change anything?" And the stem cell talks to the cell that is dividing, saying, "Make another one just the same." Then you rejuvenate just like the last one, accepting everything you received when you were born. ..."
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