Nobel prize goes to pioneers of Lego-like "click chemistry"
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[October 05, 2022]
By Johan Ahlander, Ludwig Burger and Marie Mannes
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Scientists Carolyn
Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and Barry Sharpless won the 2022 Nobel Prize in
Chemistry on Wednesday for discovering reactions that let molecules snap
together to create desired compounds and that offer insight into cell
biology.
The technologies known as click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry
are now used globally to explore cells and track biological processes,
the award-giving body said in a statement.
"Using bioorthogonal reactions, researchers have improved the targeting
of cancer pharmaceuticals, which are now being tested in clinical
trials," it added.
The prize was awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and is
worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($915,072).
The third of the prizes unveiled over six consecutive weekdays, the
chemistry Nobel follows those for medicine and physics announced earlier
this week.
Sharpless joins an elite band of scientists who have won two Nobel
prizes. The other individuals are John Bardeen who won the Physics prize
twice, Marie Curie, who won Physics and Chemistry, Linus Pauling who won
Chemistry and Peace and Frederick Sanger who won the Chemistry prize
twice.
"I'm absolutely stunned, I'm sitting here and I can hardly breathe,"
Bertozzi said from California after the academy reached her by telephone
with the news she had won.
She added that as part of her work, she and her team managed to
visualize and understand cell surface structures known as glycans,
leading to a new idea in cancer immune therapy.
Bertozzi works at Stanford University, Sharpless works at the Scripps
Research institute, both in California, while Meldal is at the
University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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Professor Olof Ramstrom, member of the
Nobel Committee for Chemistry attends a news conference, where
winners Caroline R. Bertozzi (U.S), Morten Meldal (Denmark) and K.
Barry Sharpless (U.S.) of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Chemistry are
announced, at The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm,
Sweden, October 5, 2022. TT News Agency/Christine Olsson via REUTERS
Meldal told Reuters his legs and body started shaking with
excitement when the Nobel committee called.
"It is not every day to have a Dane get the Nobel Prize," he said,
adding he had been recording a teaching video when he received the
news and that he was very proud on behalf of his colleagues and
team.
Meldal described click-chemistry as a way to build complex
structures and link them together as if they were pieces of Lego,
the Danish plastic construction toy.
The 2021 chemistry award was won by German Benjamin List and
Scottish-born David MacMillan for their work in creating new tools
to build molecules, aiding in the development of new drugs as well
as in areas such as plastics.
The prizes for achievements in science, literature and peace were
established in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and businessman
Alfred Nobel, himself a chemist, and have been awarded since 1901.
Economics was added later.
The prizes have been awarded every year with a few interruptions,
primarily for the world wars, and made no break for the COVID-19
pandemic though much of the pageantry and events were put on hold or
temporarily moved online.
($1 = 10.9281 Swedish crowns)
(Reporting by Niklas Pollard, Simon Johnson and Johan Ahlander in
Stockholm, and Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt; additional reporting by
Terje Solsvik in Oslo, Anna Ringstrom in Stockholm and Marie Mannes
in Gdansk; editing by Frank Jack Daniel)
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