This is the VOA Special English Health Report.
This year's Nobel Prize in medicine will go to three
researchers who found a way to learn about the duties of individual genes. They
discovered how to inactivate, or knock out, single genes in laboratory animals.
The result is known as "knockout mice."
The Karolinska Institute named the winners last week. Two
Americans, Mario
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| Mario Capecchi holds a laboratory
mouse |
Capecchi and Oliver Smithies, will share the one and
one-half million dollar prize with Martin Evans of Britain. They will receive
what is officially called the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine at a
ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden, on December tenth.
In the nineteen eighties, Mario Capecchi and Oliver
Smithies both studied cells in mice to find how to target individual genes for
changes. But the kinds of cells they independently studied could not be used to
create gene-targeted animals.
Martin Evans had the solution. He developed embryonic stem
cells that could produce mice that carried new genetic material.
The research greatly expanded knowledge about embryonic
development as well as aging and disease. It led to a new technology -- gene
targeting. And this has already produced five hundred mouse models of human
conditions.
Knockout mice are used for general research and for the
development of new treatments. International efforts aim to make them available
in the near future for all genes.
Mario Capecchi is a researcher at the University of Utah.
He was born in Italy in nineteen thirty-seven. He was homeless and on his own
for years as a young boy.
His mother had been sent to a Nazi German death camp. But
she survived, and after she was freed she found him in a hospital. He was nine
years old and being treated for severe malnutrition.
They came to the United States where he entered school for
the first time. Later, he became an American citizen.
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| Oliver Smithies |
Oliver Smithies was born in Britain in nineteen
twenty-five and also became an American citizen. He is a professor at the
University of North Carolina. And, at age fifty, he learned to fly. He flies a
motor glider and small airplanes.
Martin Evans was born in nineteen forty-one, also in
Britain. He is director of the School of Biosciences at Cardiff University in
Wales. He called winning the Nobel Prize "a boyhood dream come true."
And that's the VOA Special English Health report, written
by Caty Weaver. Transcripts and MP3 files of our reports are at
voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Barbara Klein.