The Sentinel-Record

Nobel Prize in chemistry honors ‘greener’ way to build molecules

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STOCKHOLM — Two scientists won the Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday for finding an ingenious and environmen­tally cleaner way to build molecules — an approach now used to make a variety of compounds, including medicines and pesticides.

The work of Benjamin List and David W.C. MacMillan has allowed scientists to produce those molecules more cheaply, efficientl­y, safely and with significan­tly less hazardous waste.

“It’s already benefiting humankind greatly,” said Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede, a member of the Nobel panel.

It was the second day in a row that a Nobel rewarded work that had environmen­tal implicatio­ns. The physics prize honored developmen­ts that expanded our understand­ing of climate change, just weeks before the start of global climate negotiatio­ns in Scotland.

The chemistry prize focused on the making of molecules. That requires linking atoms together in specific arrangemen­ts, an often difficult and slow task. Until the beginning of the millennium, chemists had only two methods — or catalysts — to speed up the process, using either complicate­d enzymes or metal catalysts.

That all changed when List, of the Max Planck Institute in Germany, and MacMillan, of Princeton University in New Jersey, independen­tly reported that small organic molecules can be used to do the job. The new tools have been important for developing medicines and minimizing drug manufactur­ing glitches, including problems that can cause harmful side effects.

Johan Åqvist, chair of the Nobel panel, called the method as “simple as it is ingenious.”

MacMillan said that winning the prize left him “stunned, shocked, happy, very proud.”

“I grew up in Scotland, a working-class kid. My dad’s a steelworke­r. My mom was a home help. … I was lucky enough to get a chance to come to America, to do my Ph.D.,” he said.

In fact, he said at a news conference in Princeton, he was planning to follow his older brother into physics, but the physics classes in college were at 8 a.m. in a cold and leaky classroom in rainy Scotland, while the chemistry courses were two hours later in warmer, drier spaces. As he told that story, he said he could hear his wife pleading with him not to share it.

His said the inspiratio­n for his Nobel-winning work came when thinking about the dirty process of making chemicals — one that requires precaution­s he likened to those taken at nuclear power plants. If he could devise a way of making medicines faster by completely different means that didn’t require vats of metal catalysts, the process would be safer for both workers and the planet, he reasoned.

List said he did not initially know MacMillan was working on the same subject and figured his own hunch might just be a “stupid idea” — until it worked. At that eureka moment, “I did feel that this could be something big,” the 53-year-old said.

H.N. Cheng, president of the American Chemical Society, said the laureates developed “new magic wands.”

Before the their work, “the standard catalysts frequently used were metals, which frequently have environmen­tal downsides,” Cheng said. “They accumulate, they leach, they may be hazardous.”

The catalysts that MacMillan and List pioneered “are organic, so they will degrade faster, and they are also cheaper,” he said.

The Nobel panel noted that their contributi­ons made the production of key drugs easier, including an antiviral and an anti-anxiety medication.

“One way to look at their work is like molecular carpentry,” said John Lorsch, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the U.S. National Institutes of Health. “They’ve found ways to not only speed up the chemical joining,” he said, “but to make sure it only goes in either the right-handed or left-handed direction.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ David W.C. MacMillan, one of two winners of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, smiles as he is interviewe­d Wednesday outside the Frick Chemistry Laboratory and Department of Chemistry at Princeton University in Princeton, N.J.
The Associated Press ■ David W.C. MacMillan, one of two winners of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, smiles as he is interviewe­d Wednesday outside the Frick Chemistry Laboratory and Department of Chemistry at Princeton University in Princeton, N.J.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ German scientist Benjamin List, who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry, drinks champagne Wednesday at the Max-Planck-Institute for Coal Research in Muelheim, Germany.
The Associated Press ■ German scientist Benjamin List, who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry, drinks champagne Wednesday at the Max-Planck-Institute for Coal Research in Muelheim, Germany.

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