US DUO BAG MEDICINE NOBEL
They led research on touch and temperature receptors
US scientists David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian yesterday won the Nobel Medicine Prize for discoveries on receptors for temperature and touch.
The duo’s research, conducted independently of each other in the late 1990s and 2000s, is being used to develop treatments for a wide range of diseases and conditions, including chronic pain.
Julius, who in 2019 won the $3-million Breakthrough Prize in life sciences, said he was stunned to receive the call from the Nobel committee early yesterday.
Lebanon-born
The choice of Julius, 65, and Patapoutian, who was born in Lebanon, underscored how little scientists knew about how our bodies perceive the external world before their discoveries — and how much there still is to learn, said Oscar Marin, director of the MRC Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders at King’s College London.
“While we understood the physiology of the senses, what we didn’t understand was how we sensed differences in temperature or pressure,” Marin said. “Knowing how our body senses these changes is fundamental because once we know those molecules, they can be targeted. It’s like finding a lock and now we know the precise keys that will be necessary to unlock it.”
Marin said the discoveries opened up “an entire field of pharmacology” and that researchers were already working to develop drugs to target the receptors they identified.
Scope for pain treatments
Marin predicted that new treatments for pain would likely come first, but that knowing how the body detects changes in pressure could eventually lead to drugs for heart disease, if scientists can figure out how to alleviate pressure on blood vessels and other organs.
“One never really expects that to happen... I thought it was a prank,” he told Swedish Radio.
Our ability to sense heat, cold and touch is essential for survival, the Nobel Committee explained, and underpins our interaction with the world around us.
“The groundbreaking discoveries... by this year’s Nobel Prize laureates have allowed us to understand how heat, cold and mechanical force can initiate the nerve impulses that allow us to perceive and adapt to the world,” the Nobel jury said.
Julius was recognised for his research using capsaicin — a compound from chili peppers that induces a burning sensation — to identify which nerve sensors in the skin respond to heat.
The human body generates heat in response to inflammation, so we can protect the affected area and allow it to heal.
Julius told Scientific American in 2019 that he got the idea to study chili peppers after a visit to the grocery store.
“I was looking at these shelves and shelves of basically chili peppers and extracts (hot sauce) and thinking, ‘This is such an important and such a fun problem to look at. I’ve really got to get serious about this’,” he said.
Pioneering discovery
Patapoutian’s pioneering discovery was identifying the class of nerve sensors that respond to touch.
Julius, a professor at the University of California in San Francisco and the 12-yea-ryounger Patapoutian, a professor at Scripps Research in California, will share the Nobel Prize cheque for 10 million Swedish kronor ($1.1 million).
Pioneers of messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, which paved the way for mRNA Covid-19 vaccines, and immune system researchers had been widely tipped as favourites.
Last year, the award went to three virologists for the discovery of the Hepatitis C virus.
The Nobel season continues today with the award for physics and tomorrow with chemistry, followed by the muchanticipated gongs for literature on Thursday and peace on Friday before the economics prize winds things up on October 11.
Speculation on potential Peace Prize winners has ranged from the Belarusian opposition to climate campaigners such as Sweden’s Greta Thunberg.
Meanwhile, literary circles have been buzzing with speculation that the Swedish academy could choose to rectify an imbalance with the literature prize that has seen Europe and North America dominate since 2012.
In total, those two regions account for 95 of 117 literature laureates.
The appeal, signed at a formal ceremony in the Apostolic Palace, was handed over to the head of the COP26 conference, Alok Sharma.