China Daily

Nobel winner launches prize

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first Nobel Prize winner in physiology or medicine, Tu Youyou, celebrated her 86th birthday by signing an official agreement to donate 1 million yuan ($144,900) to establish the Peking University Tu Youyou Talent Award Foundation.

The initiative will provide financial support and incentives to the university’s students and young teachers of medicine.

Han Qide, vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference — a legislativ­e body — and Hao Ping, China’s vice-minister of education, also Party secretary of Peking University, witnessed the signing at Tu’s residence on Dec 25, a few days before her birthday on Dec 30.

“I’ve gotten to where I am now thanks to the university’s medicine program,” Tu says.

“I hope the younger generation can achieve even more.”

Young researcher­s enjoy a favorable environmen­t compared with the past, as the country is now very supportive of science and innovation, she says.

Tu is best-known for discoverin­g the use of artemisini­n and di hydro artemis in into treat malaria.

She shared the Nobel Prize in 2015 with Irishman William Campbell and Japanese Satoshi Omura for developing therapies against malaria and infections caused by roundworm parasites.

That made her the first Chinese Nobel laureate in physiology or medicine, and the first Nobel winner whose education and research was completed exclusivel­y in China.

Tu enrolled in Peking University’s medicine school (now the Peking University Health Science Center) in 1951.

After graduation, she continued her studies and research of fusing traditiona­l Chinese and modern Western medicines at the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, where she still works.

She won the top medical-science prize, the Las ker Award, in 2011. She was the first Chinese to claim the honor.

Her foundation will award 5,000 yuan per student and 25,000 yuan per teacher. The foundation’s annual earnings will determine the number of recipients.

The PKU Health Science Center, founded in 1912, ranks among China’s most prestigiou­s medical schools.

It has earned internatio­nal prominence for its researcher­s’ achievemen­ts.

For instance, in a proof-of-principle study, its researcher­s expanded the genetic code of the influenza A virus’ genome and generated viruses that remained fully capable of activating the immune system but were unable to replicate in convention­al cells.

The research was published in the journal Science last month.

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Tu Youyou, a Nobel laureate.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY Tu Youyou, a Nobel laureate.

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