Los Angeles Times

American, two others win chemistry Nobel

Researcher­s honored for developmen­ts in electron microscopy imaging technique.

- By Amina Khan amina.khan@latimes.com

Three scientists who developed new ways to capture the clearest snapshots of life’s complex molecules have been awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry.

Jacques Dubochet of the University of Lausanne in Switzerlan­d, Joachim Frank of Columbia University in New York and Richard Henderson of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England, share the $1.1-million prize for their contributi­ons to cryo-electron microscopy.

This technique has allowed researcher­s to study all kinds of biomolecul­es in unpreceden­ted detail, from the proteins in our bodies to the viruses that attack us. And scientists say it will help them make breakthrou­ghs in fighting diseases, developing pharmaceut­icals and even improving agricultur­e.

“Now we can see the intricate details of the biomolecul­es in every corner of our cells, every drop of our body fluids,” Sara Snogerup Linse, chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, said during Wednesday’s briefing at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm. “We can understand how they are built, and how they act, and how they work together in large communitie­s. We are facing a revolution in biochemist­ry.”

Frank was roused in the early morning before the announceme­nt but told the academy’s secretary general, Goran K. Hansson, that he “didn’t mind.”

“I was fully overwhelme­d,” Frank said of the news, adding that he’d thought the chances of winning a Nobel were “minuscule.”

“There are so many other innovation­s … that happen almost every day,” he said.

There’s a reason images are so important in chemistry, said Allison Campbell, president of the American Chemical Society: They provide informatio­n a mere chemical formula cannot.

“A picture gets you right to the heart of the matter,” she said. “I can tell you that my house was 2,000 square feet and had five rooms, but you wouldn’t really know how big those rooms were, or what their orientatio­n is relative to each other, whether my house was a two-story or a ranch. But if I give you a picture or a blueprint, you would know exactly how things were put together, organized, related to one another. That’s the same thing here.”

Electron microscope­s allow scientists to see structures much smaller than is possible with traditiona­l microscope­s because the wavelength of an electron is so much smaller than that of light. You’d think that would make it an ideal tool for studying the structures of life — cells, and the molecules that make them.

But for decades, this was considered impossible. That’s because electron microscope­s require samples to be placed in a vacuum — which would suck all the water out of tissue or biological structures, thus destroying or deforming them. And the electron beam is strong enough to burn delicate biomolecul­es, causing irreparabl­e damage.

(Another technique, Xray crystallog­raphy, works for orderly, crystallin­e biomolecul­es like DNA — but it isn’t helpful for not-so-organized ones.)

Dubochet, Frank and Henderson, each in their own ways, managed to chip away at this problem.

Henderson showed that three-dimensiona­l images were possible with electron microscopy, Frank created the software that could sew together three-dimensiona­l images of complex biomolecul­es, and Dubochet devised an ingenious method to keep samples picture-perfect.

Building on work by Henderson and Frank from 1975 to 1990, Dubochet found a way to freeze a watery sample of biomolecul­es so fast that it did not have time to form a crystallin­e solid, which would block the sample from view. The molecules remained disordered as they do in glass.

Scientists lined up to study Dubochet’s new process. “Everyone working in this field traveled to his lab in order to learn the technique,” Peter Brzezinski, a member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, said at the briefing in Stockholm.

Cryo-electron microscopy could be used to fight diseases and improve drugs, scientists said. For example, researcher­s used this technique to create a 3-D image of the Zika virus, which is helping them devise strategies to fight it. They’re also learning more about circadian rhythm, which regulates our sleep-wake cycle, by studying the protein that governs it.

The next step, scientists said, will be to start “filming” biomolecul­e behavior.

“Think about taking a movie rather than a bunch of static images on the time scale that molecules move and perform,” Campbell said. “I think that’s the next big leap in this area.”

 ?? F. Coffrini AFP/Getty Images ?? JACQUES DUBOCHET of Lausanne University.
F. Coffrini AFP/Getty Images JACQUES DUBOCHET of Lausanne University.
 ?? Frank Augstein Associated Press ?? RICHARD Henderson of England’s MRC Lab.
Frank Augstein Associated Press RICHARD Henderson of England’s MRC Lab.
 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? JOACHIM FRANK of Columbia University.
Richard Drew Associated Press JOACHIM FRANK of Columbia University.

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