The Free Press Journal

Trio takes chemistry Nobel for study on biomolecul­es

- AGENCIES

A revolution­ary technique dubbed cryo-electron microscopy, which has shed light on the Zika virus and an Alzheimer's enzyme, earned scientists Jacques Dubochet, Joachim Frank and Richard Henderson the Nobel Chemistry Prize on Wednesday.

Thanks to the internatio­nal team's "cool method", which uses electron beams to examine the tiniest structures of cells, "researcher­s can now freeze biomolecul­es mid-movement and visualise processes they have never previously seen," the Nobel chemistry committee said.

This has been "decisive for both the basic understand­ing of life's chemistry and for the developmen­t of-pharmaceut­icals," it added.

The ultra-sensitive imaging method allows molecules to be flash-frozen and studied in their natural form, without the need for dyes.

It has laid bare never-before-seen details of the tiny protein machines that run all cells. "When researcher­s began to suspect that the Zika virus was causing the epidemic of brain-damaged newborns in Brazil, they turned to cryo-EM (electron microscopy) to visualise the virus," the committee said.

Frank, a 77-year-old, German-born biochemist­ry professor at Columbia University in New York, was woken from his sleep when the committee announced the prize in Stockholm, six hours ahead.

"There are so many other discoverie­s every day, I was in a way speechless," he said. "It's wonderful news."

In the first half of the 20th century, biomolecul­es -proteins, DNA and RNA -were terra incognita on the map of biochemist­ry.

Because the powerful electron beam destroys biological material, electron microscope­s were long thought to be useful only to study dead matter.

But 72-year-old Henderson, from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, used an electron microscope in 1990 to generate a three-dimensiona­l image of a protein at atomic resolution, a groundbrea­king discovery which proved the technology's potential.

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