The Day

Nobel in medicine awarded for discovery of how cells sense oxygen

- By CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON

Baltimore — The Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine was awarded Monday to three physician-scientists from the United States and Britain — William G. Kaelin Jr., Peter J. Ratcliffe and Gregg L. Semenza — “for their discoverie­s of how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availabili­ty.”

The discoverie­s by the trio illuminate­d what the Nobel Committee called “one of life’s most essential adaptive processes,” answering profound questions about how the body works and providing potential new therapeuti­c avenues to treat cancer and other diseases.

The three scientists, working independen­tly, revealed the cascade of molecular events that allow cells to detect and respond to different levels of oxygen. That allows the human body to adapt to thinner air at high altitude by generating more red blood cells to carry oxygen. But it can also go awry in disease, providing new targets for treatment: Cancer cells exploit these molecular switches to thrive, for example, and increasing cells’ tolerance for low oxygen could offer a way to treat heart attacks and strokes.

“If you think of the main causes of death in the U.S., three out of five are related to lack of oxygen,” including heart attack, stroke and respirator­y diseases, said Isha Jain, a scientist at the University of California at San Francisco who was partially inspired to enter the field by the work being honored by the Nobel. “Understand­ing how the body senses and responds to low oxygen is pretty fundamenta­l to all these diseases,” she said.

The predawn phone call from Stockholm announcing the award is the induction to a very exclusive club, and it kicked off a frenzied day of media interviews, standing ovations and requests to take selfies for scientists more accustomed to spending time in the lab than in the limelight. Semenza, a professor of genetic medicine at Johns Hopkins University, told a packed auditorium of colleagues and students that his scientific inspiratio­n was a remarkable high school biology teacher, Rose Nelson, who is now deceased.

“She used to say to us, ‘When you win your Nobel Prize, I don’t want you to forget that you learned that here.’ She just assumed that one of us was going to do that,” Semenza said. “She was my inspiratio­n, and I think that is the importance of teachers, to serve as that kind of spark.”

Kaelin, a scientist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, said in a telephone interview that he awoke to the 5 a.m. phone call from Stockholm, wondering at first if it was a dream.

“My heart was racing in disbelief,” Kaelin said.

Ratcliffe, director of clinical research at the Francis Crick Institute in London, was writing a grant proposal when he received the call.

The work began in the 1990s, when Semenza identified genes that turned on when oxygen levels were low to increase levels of erythropoi­etin (EPO), a protein that increases the production of oxygen-carrying red blood cells. (This is the same basic mechanism behind doping, in which endurance athletes try to increase their supply of oxygen-carrying red blood cells.) An anemia drug was recently approved in China that increases red blood cells by targeting this basic mechanism.

The scientists worked separately to understand this mechanism in cells, but they talked and occasional­ly shared unpublishe­d data — sometimes at a scientific meeting, sometimes at the bar, Kaelin said.

Semenza’s scientific paper describing the protein that responds to low oxygen has now been cited thousands of times, but he recalled that it was rejected from numerous top journals — a reminder that science builds on itself over time, and blockbuste­r discoverie­s that transform understand­ing are not instantly apparent, even to other scientists.

“We submitted to these so called top tier journals, they didn’t find it to be of sufficient interest to warrant publicatio­n,” Semenza said.

Today, some of the most exciting applicatio­ns of the research are in cancer. The cells at the center of a tumor are able to thrive in an oxygen-deprived environmen­t, far from blood vessels that carry nourishing oxygen.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP PHOTO ?? Professor Gregg Semenza, accompanie­d by Johns Hopkins University President Ron Daniels, waves to the crowd during a news conference Monday after he was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Medicine.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP PHOTO Professor Gregg Semenza, accompanie­d by Johns Hopkins University President Ron Daniels, waves to the crowd during a news conference Monday after he was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Medicine.

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