homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2013 Awarded

Has it already been a year? It’s Nobel Prize season once again, and the first award has been given in “Physiology or Medicine“. James E Rothman, Randy W Schekman and Thomas C Südhof took the prize for their work on the mechanism that controls the transport of membrane-bound parcels or ‘vesicles’ through cells. The American […]

Mihai Andrei
October 8, 2013 @ 5:01 am

share Share

Has it already been a year? It’s Nobel Prize season once again, and the first award has been given in “Physiology or Medicine“. James E Rothman, Randy W Schekman and Thomas C Südhof took the prize for their work on the mechanism that controls the transport of membrane-bound parcels or ‘vesicles’ through cells.

Nobel Prize winners for Medicine or Physiology.

Nobel Prize winners for Medicine or Physiology.

The American trio solved one of medicine’s biggest mysteries – how a cell transports crucial cargo—such as hormones—to the right place at the right time.

“The significance of the work [relates to] how cells talk to each other,” said Mike Cousin, a biologist at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. “This discovery has underpinned a lot of cell-biology research over the past 20 years.”

Besides the tremendous scientific value of their research, the practical value is also huge; any disturbance in this transport mechanism can cause a range of ailments, from neurological diseases to diabetes and even immune disorders. For example, certain bacteria mess up the transport machinery and cause tetanus, a disease that kills thousands of newborns each year. A similar thing happens in many cases of schizophrenia. Several labs are now working on this transport mechanism in an attempt to find treatments for such maladies – all thanks to the three researchers work.

Dr. Schekman came up with the idea of studying the problem in yeast; many researchers frowned upon this idea, believing that findings on a single-celled creature couldn’t possibly apply to organisms as complicated as our own, and because they also thought yeast doesn’t have a complex excretion system. But Dr. Schekman persevered. He compared normal yeast cells to some in which he had disrupted the normal behavior, and was thus able to identify which genes are responsible the transport to different compartments and to the cell surface.

“It’s not intuitive, but when you cripple the process, you gain a lot of information” about how the transportation process works, said Dr. Schekman, at a press conference in Berkeley on Monday.

Meanwhile, through a series of ingenious experiments, discovered specific proteins on the vesicle membrane that fuse or “dock” with matching proteins, just as if they were two sides of a zipper – but why this happened was still unclear. Dr. Südhof discovered that when the vesicle’s molecular machinery senses calcium ions, it triggers the docking process – thus explaining how the magic happens.

share Share

The Fat Around Your Thighs Might Be Affecting Your Mental Health

New research finds that where fat is stored—not just how much you have—might shape your mood.

Autism rates in the US just hit a record high of 1 in 31 children. Experts explain why it is happening

Autism rates show a steady increase but there is no simple explanation for a "supercomplex" reality.

Tooth loss is linked to cognitive decline, study in India shows

The connection between tooth loss and cognitive decline may surprise you.

Scientists Rediscover a Lost Piece of Female Anatomy That May Play a Crucial Role in Fertility

Scientists reexamine a forgotten structure near the ovary and discover surprising functions

Superbugs are the latest crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa

Researchers found an alarming rise in antibiotic-resistant infections among children.

Drug Regenerates Retina and Restores Vision in Blind Mice

A protein hidden in our eyes may be the reason we can't repair lost vison.

This Chewing Gum Can Destroy 95 Percent of Flu and Herpes Viruses

Viruses had enough fun in our mouths, it's time to wipe them out.

Here's why you should stop working out before bedtime

Even hours before bedtime, workouts can be a problem.

Some people are just wired to like music more, study shows

Most people enjoy music to some extent. But while some get goosebumps from their favorite song, others don’t really feel that much. A part of that is based on our culture. But according to one study, about half of it is written in our genes. In one of the largest twin studies on musical pleasure […]

Researchers analyzed 10,000 studies and found cannabis could actually fight cancer

Scientists used AI to scan a huge number of papers and found cannabis gets a vote of confidence from science.