The Korea Times

Trio win medicine Nobel for work on how cells adapt to oxygen

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STOCKHOLM (AFP) — Three researcher­s from the US and Britain on Monday shared the Nobel Medicine Prize for research into how human cells sense and adapt to changing oxygen levels, opening up new strategies to fight common diseases such as cancer and anaemia.

William Kaelin and Gregg Semenza of the U.S. and Britain’s Peter Ratcliffe split the nine million Swedish kronor ($914,000, 833,000 euros) award.

While the fact that humans need oxygen to survive has been understood for centuries, how the body registers and responds to oxygen was little known prior to the trio’s pioneering work.

“They establishe­d the basis for our understand­ing of how oxygen levels affect cellular metabolism and physiologi­cal function,” the jury said.

Semenza studied a gene known as EPO which causes the body to create more red blood cells and isolated the specific DNA segments that help it to adapt to low oxygen levels. Radcliffe and Semenza then applied this knowledge to show that the oxygen sensing mechanism was present in virtually all human tissues.

Kaelin identified another gene, present in patients with a genetic disorder that puts them at far greater risk of certain cancers. The gene rewires the body’s ability to prevent the onset of cancer, and it plays a key role in how cancer cells respond to low oxygen levels.

Their work has shed new light on the specific, cell-level processes the body undergoes when low on oxygen — from helping our muscles function during exercise to adapting to life at high altitude. Cells’ oxygen-sensing ability is also essential during fetal developmen­t and in creating new blood vessels.

A large number of diseases are linked to EPO, including renal failure and severe anaemia. Cancerous tumours use the body’s oxygen-regulating tools to hijack blood vessel formation and allow the cancer cells to spread. The Nobel committee said Monday that several trials were underway developing drugs to interrupt this process, potentiall­y short-circuiting tumour growth.

“Intense ongoing efforts in academic laboratori­es and pharmaceut­ical companies are now focused on developing drugs that can interfere with different disease states by either activating, or blocking, the oxygen-sensing machinery,” the jury said.

Kaelin, 61, works at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in the US, while Semenza, 63, is director of the Vascular Research Program at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Cell Engineerin­g. Ratcliffe, 65, is director of clinical research at the Francis Crick Institute in London, and director of the Target Discovery Institute in Oxford.

 ?? Yonhap ?? From left: British scientist Sir Peter J. Ratcliffe, U.S. scientists Gregg L. Semenza and William G. Kaelin. The three jointly won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work on how cells sense and adapt to oxygen levels.
Yonhap From left: British scientist Sir Peter J. Ratcliffe, U.S. scientists Gregg L. Semenza and William G. Kaelin. The three jointly won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work on how cells sense and adapt to oxygen levels.

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