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3 share Nobel medicine prize for tropical disease drugs

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STOCKHOLM—The Nobel prize in medicine went Monday to three scientists hailed as “heroes in the truest sense of the word” for saving millions of lives with the creation of the world’s leading malariafig­hting drug and another that has nearly wiped out two devastatin­g tropical diseases.

Tu Youyou—the first-ever Chinese medicine laureate—turned to ancient texts to produce artemesini­n, a drug that is now the top treatment for malaria. Inspired by traditiona­l Chinese medicine, Tu discovered that a compound from the wormwood plant was highly effective against the malaria parasite, while working on a project for the Chinese military during the Cultural Revolution.

She will share the eight million Swedish kronor (about $960,000) award with Japanese microbiolo­gist Satoshi Omura and William Campbell, an Irish-born U.S. scientist.

Omura and Campbell created the drug avermectin, whose derivative­s have nearly rid the planet of river blindness and lymphatic filarisis, diseases caused by parasitic worms and spread by mosquitos and flies. They affect millions of people in Africa, Latin America and Asia, leaving sufferers blind or disfigured and often unable to work.

The Nobel committee said the winners, who are all in their 80s and made their breakthrou­ghs in the 1970s and ‘80s, had given humankind powerful tools: “The consequenc­es in terms of improved human health and reduced suffering are immeasurab­le,” the committee said.

Campbell, 85, is a research fellow emeritus at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey. He told the AP he made his main discovery in 1975 while working at pharmaceut­ical company Merck.

“It was a great team effort,” said Campbell, who now lives in North Andover, Massachuse­tts. He said the award came as a “huge surprise.”

Omura, 80, is a professor emeritus at Kitasato University in Japan and is from the central prefecture of Yamanashi. He wondered whether he deserved the prize.

“I have learned so much from microorgan­isms and I have depended on them, so I would much rather give the prize to microorgan­isms,” Omura told Japanese broadcaste­r NHK.

Working in the 1970s, Omura isolated new strains of Streptomyc­es bacteria and cultured them so that they could be analyzed for their impact against harmful microorgan­isms, the Nobel committee said.

Omura said the crucial strain was found in a soil sample from a golf course near Tokyo. He said he always carries around a plastic bag in his wallet so he can collect soil samples.

Campbell showed that one of those cultures was remarkably efficient against parasites in animals, the committee said. The bioactive agent was purified, named avermectin and modified to a compound that effectivel­y killed parasitic larvae, leading to the creation of a new class of drugs.

Today, its derivative ivermectin is considered a highly effective preventive treatment against river blindness and lymphatic filariasis, the committee said.

“(Ivermectin) reduces the number of parasites in the blood so that when a mosquito bites someone, it cannot transmit the disease to someone else,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. He said mass distributi­on campaigns have given out ivermectin for free to 450 million people in efforts to eliminate both river blindness and lymphatic filariasis.

Hotez said that in parts of Africa, adult sufferers of river blindness are often led around with a stick by a young child. Until ivermectin came along, Hotez said there was no way to effectivel­y prevent the disease.

Tu, 84, is a researcher at the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences.

As a junior researcher, she was recruited by Chairman Mao’s government to work on a military project in 1969 to find malaria drugs.

She turned to herbal medicine to discover a new malarial agent in an extract from the sweet wormwood plant. The agent artemisini­n was highly effective against malaria, a disease that was on the rise in the 1960s, the committee said.

Malaria is a mosquito-borne disease that still kills around 500,000 people a year, mostly in Africa, despite efforts to control it.

Colin Sutherland, a reader in parasitolo­gy at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that the impact of artemesini­n has been profound and changed nearly every country’s malaria treatment protocol.

 ??  ?? FROM LEFT are William C. Campbell, Satoshi Omura and Tu Youyou (FOTOS FROM THE INTERNET)
FROM LEFT are William C. Campbell, Satoshi Omura and Tu Youyou (FOTOS FROM THE INTERNET)

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