Arab Times

US trio win for body rhythm work

Nobel 2017 season opens with medicine prize

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STOCKHOLM, Oct 2, (AFP): US geneticist­s Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young were awarded the Nobel Medicine Prize Monday for shedding light on the biological clock that governs the sleepwake cycles of most living things.

The team’s work revealed the role of genes in setting the “circadian clock” which regulates sleep and eating patterns, hormones and body temperatur­e, the Nobel Assembly said.

“Their discoverie­s explain how plants, animals and humans adapt their biological rhythm so that it is synchronis­ed with the Earth’s revolution­s.”

All life on Earth is tuned to the rotation of our planet. Scientists have long known that living organisms, including humans, have an internal timekeeper that helps them anticipate and adapt to the rhythm of the day.

Hall, 72, Rosbash, 73, and Young, 68, “were able to peek inside our biological clock and elucidate its inner workings,” the Nobel jury said.

They identified genes that regulate the clock, and the mechanism by which light can synchronis­e it.

Rosbash told Swedish Radio he was rattled when the committee’s call woke him from his sleep at 5:10 am.

“I was called on the landline next to my bed which never rings unless someone has died or something of this magnitude happens,” he recounted. “I was restless, both literally and figurative­ly. My wife said: ‘Please start to breathe’.”

The circadian clock is what causes jetlag — which happens when our internal clock and external environmen­t move out of sync as we change time zones.

It also regulates sleep, which is critical for normal brain function. Circadian dysfunctio­n has been linked to depression, bipolar disorder, cognitive function, memory formation and some neurologic­al diseases.

Studies have indicated that a chronic

and more explosive stage.

Government spokesman Hilaire Bule said the latest scientific informatio­n it had received was that the volcano was misalignme­nt between our lifestyle and circadian clock — irregular shift work for example — may be associated with an increased risk for cancer, neurodegen­erative diseases, metabolic disorders and inflammati­on.

Scientists are working hard on methods to alter the rhythm of errant clocks as a means to “improve human health,” said the Nobel team.

Using the fruit fly as a model organism, this year’s laureates isolated a gene that controls the daily biological rhythm, called the period gene.

“They showed that this gene encodes a protein that accumulate­s in the cell during the night and is then degraded during the day,” the Nobel team said.

“Subsequent­ly they identified additional protein components of this machinery, exposing the mechanism governing the self-sustaining clockwork inside the cell.”

The trio will share the prize sum of nine million Swedish kronor (about $1.1 million or 937,000 euros).

Changes

“Just about every facet of our body changes predictabl­y over the course of the day and night and these changes are driven by this internal timing mechanism,” Michael Hastings of the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge told AFP.

“Every dimension of our health, every dimension of our personalit­y or reactions to medicines, our reactions to disease are variable and are on the very precise programme set by this internal body clock.”

Rosbash, born in 1944 in Kansas City to migrants who had fled Nazi Germany, received his doctoral degree in 1970 at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, and has since 1974 been on faculty at Brandeis University.

Young received his doctoral degree

stable and no longer a threat. But he said government ministers would need to meet and agree to lift the evacuation order before the exodus would be stopped or at the University of Texas in Austin in 1975, and has been on faculty at the Rockefelle­r University in New York since 1978.

Meanwhile, Hall originally planned to attend medical school when he entered Amherst College in Massachuse­tts in 1963, but halfway through his bachelor’s degree his curiosity for medicine was replaced by one for basic science.

He went on to earn his doctoral degree in 1971 at the University of Washington, before joining Brandeis University in 1974. He is now retired.

On Tuesday, the physics prize laureates will be revealed, followed by those for chemistry on Wednesday.

The literature prize will be announced on Thursday, the peace prize on Friday, and the economics prize will wrap things up on Monday, Oct 9.

For literature, the Swedish Academy is expected to turn the page on last year’s surprise choice of US singer songwriter Bob Dylan, which divided the literary world.

This year it is expected to go for a more conservati­ve pick, such as Italy’s Claudio Magris, Kenya’s Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Canadian author Margaret Atwood, Syrian poet Adonis, Philip Roth and Don DeLillo of the US, Israel’s Amos Oz and Haruki Murakami of Japan.

A newcomer dominating the rumour mill is Chinese novelist Yan Lianke.

As for the peace prize, a total of 318 nomination­s have been submitted this year to succeed last year’s winner Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos.

Anti-nuclear efforts could be honoured, some have suggested. Tensions have escalated between Washington and Pyongyang after North Korea’s sixth nuclear test, and there is growing uncertaint­y over the Iran deal, which US President Donald Trump has threatened to tear up.

reversed.

The ash could be smelled in the air and was polluting water supplies, said Joe Cropp, a spokesman with the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross who has been helping on Ambae. (AP)

Rangers target bad wolf:

The eyes of a predator prowling through the Judean desert are easily seen in the park ranger’s spotlight from 100 metres (yards) away.

Normally this would mean a smaller animal, a fox or the occasional coyote, is after a midnight snack.

But since the start of summer, when the natural order got thrown slightly out of whack, there is a decent chance that the beady eyes staring back from the darkness belong to a wolf.

A spike in close encounters between people and wolves along a highly-visited section of the Dead Sea’s shoreline has caused alarm in Israel, with wildlife authoritie­s stepping up efforts to protect tourists and locals.

“It was dark already. My little daughter took like five steps away from the tent ... And suddenly I hear like screaming, hysterical­ly, from her,” said Shilhav Ben David, who went camping in the area with her year-old daughter in May.

“I see her on the ground and this animal, wolf, was on top of her.” She rescued her daughter, who came away with mild bite marks and scratches. (RTRS)

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