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08 Oct 2002 01:40
INTERVIEW-Nobel medicine winner
and the humble worm

By Patricia Reaney

LONDON, Oct 7 (Reuters) - Nobel prize winner
Sir John Sulston had no inkling when a call
came through to his office that he had won
the 2002 award for medicine.

Although he was at his desk at the Sanger Center
in Cambridge, the 60-year-old scientist missed
the call and had to phone back the Nobel
committee in Sweden before he could believe
it was true.

"I got it as a message initially and then I phoned
back which made it easier," he told Reuters.
"I had time to ponder it and say 'is this real?'"

It was -- thanks to a humble worm.

Along with South African-born Sydney Brenner,
a professor at the Salk Institute in La Jolla,
California, and founder of the Molecular Sciences
Institute in Berkeley, California, and American
Robert Horvitz, of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) in Boston, he will share
the $1 million prize.

The three were chosen for their ground-breaking
work on how genes regulate cell division and
programmed cell death which contribute
to human diseases.

"I'm just incredibly thrilled and honoured to be
acknowledged in this way," said the white-haired
and bearded Sulston, still obviously overwhelmed.

Although he headed the British arm of the
Human Genome Project which sequenced the
human genome, or book of life, the Nobel award
is for work he had done much earlier
on the nematode worm, Caenorhabditis elegans.

HOW CELLS DIVIDE AND DIE

"This is going back to 1969 when I joined Sydney
Brenner's group. He started it all, on his own,
and then he took on a number of post-docs,"
he said. "We expanded and we found it was
a really good system for looking at the control
of cell lineage and cell death."

Because the nematode worm is so small,
it was the ideal model organism for the scientists
to follow cell division from the fertilized egg
to the adult under the microscope.

In humans there are several hundred different
cell types which specialise and turn into various
tissues and organs such as blood, muscles
and the nervous system.

Understanding the complicated processes
of how cells divide, programmed cell death,
or suicide, and how genes control the program
can shed new light on human illnesses
such as cancer, AIDS and heart disease.

Brenner's discoveries set the groundwork
for the Nobel prize. Sulston identified the first
mutation of a gene in the cell death process
and Horvitz, who joined them, discovered
and characterised key genes that control
cell death in the worm.

"It was really very exciting. It was just looking
down a microscope and discovering how it all
worked in ways that people had not been able
to see before," said Sulston.

"A number of these genes have similar functions
in humans and when disrupted, when the genes
are turned on or off inappropriately, can cause
various sorts of problems."

Last year Paul Nurse and Timothy Hunt,
of Britain's Imperial Cancer Research Fund (ICRF),
now Cancer Research UK, and American
Leland Hartwell, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center in Seattle, were honoured
for their work in identifying essential components
that control how cells replicate.

Sulston said the early work on the nematode worm
and the sequencing of the human genome will
advance medical science and the fight against
disease.

"The worm really has contributed a lot to biology,"
he said.

"We felt it was exciting and important. We were
uncovering a lot of new ground and that is
what is being recognized."

SOURCE: AlertNet / Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L07206207

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