UNC pathologist wins Nobel

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pathstudent

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good for him and it should help raise UNC's profile.

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Oliver Smithies wins Nobel Prize

CHAPEL HILL – Dr. Oliver Smithies, Excellence professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, is a co-recipient of this year’s Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine.

The Nobel Foundation today announced that Smithies, along with Mario R. Capecchi of the University of Utah’s Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Sir Martin J. Evans of the United Kingdom, will share this year’s Nobel Prize “for their discoveries of principles for introducing specific gene modifications in mice by the use of embryonic stem cells."

Smithies received the call from Stockholm at his home in Chapel Hill at 5 a.m. “I now have a peaceful sense of the rounding off of a scientific life,” Smithies later said.

The achievement marks the pinnacle of a scientific career for Smithies, a UNC faculty member for 19 years, containing numerous honors and two major innovations that have fundamentally changed the science of genetic medicine and laid the foundation for today’s research into gene therapy. Smithies is the first full-time UNC faculty member to win a Nobel Prize.

In the mid-1980s, while at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Smithies co-discovered a technique to introduce DNA material in cells, replicated a natural process called homologous DNA recombination. He thought that genetic disorders could be treated by correcting mutations in bone marrow cells, or stem cells. This “gene targeting” led to the creation of transgenic mice, or “designer mice,” that replicated human disease. Smithies’ lab produced the first animal model of cystic fibrosis, a disease caused by one defective gene, and also studied high blood pressure, atherosclerosis and other diseases.

This method also enabled scientists to study specific genes by creating “knock-out mice.” By targeting and removing, or knocking out, a specific gene, researchers can find out what happens when it’s missing. Smithies has used the analogy of removing a steering wheel from a car; without it you soon find out why it has a steering wheel. Now this research method is commonplace in biomedical research and has been the basis for thousands of published papers.

According to the Nobel committee, “gene targeting in mice has pervaded all fields of biomedicine. Its impact on the understanding of gene function and its benefits to mankind will continue to increase over many years to come.”

In the 1950s, while at Connaught Medical Research Laboratory in Toronto, Smithies greatly improved gel electrophoresis, a process of separating proteins to identify genes, using starch. The innovation simplified the procedure and became standard in laboratories.

“Oliver Smithies’ innovations have revolutionized genetic research and advanced the effective treatment of many diseases, and millions of people worldwide have better and longer lives because of the talent and determination he has brought to his work,” said UNC Chancellor James Moeser. “For decades, he has embodied the very best of academic research and humanity through his modesty, good humor, creativity and love of invention. Through his example, hundreds of students and colleagues have learned how to help the world through research.

“We are honored to have him as an anchor for the UNC community and grateful that his many contributions have been recognized with a Nobel Prize.”

“Scientist, scholar, mentor – Oliver Smithies adds Nobel Laureate to a long and glorious career,” said Dr. William L. Roper, dean of the UNC School of Medicine, vice chancellor for medical affairs and chief executive officer of the UNC Health Care System. “It gives us great pleasure to say congratulations on achieving this wonderful honor.”

Born in 1925 in Yorkshire, England, Smithies as a young child was drawn to the idea of invention and enjoyed building telescopes and radios. He attended a high school for bright students and won a scholarship to Oxford University. He earned a bachelor of arts degree (first- class honors) in physiology from Oxford in 1946, and he went on to earn his master's degree and doctorate in biochemistry from Oxford in 1951.

In an interview with the Lasker Foundation, which honored him in 2001, Smithies credited his inspiration for science to a comic strip he read as a boy. The strip had an inventor, and, Smithies said, that’s what he wanted to be, and that’s what he always has been.

He also said scientists should have three things in their lives: their work, a hobby and a family. Smithies is married to UNC colleague Dr. Nobuyo Maeda, Robert H. Wagner distinguished professor of pathology and laboratory medicine. He also is a licensed airplane pilot and is especially fond of gliding.
 
out of curiosity, how many nobel prize winners are on the pathology and lab med faculty of hopkins, bwh, and ucsf(the three premier academic pathology programs.)
 
Hmmm, def need to distinguish who is an actual pathologist who wins a Nobel vs. researchers in a pathology department. AFAIK, the only pathologist to win a Nobel is that guy who did work on H Pylori from Aus.
 
out of curiosity, how many nobel prize winners are on the pathology and lab med faculty of hopkins, bwh, and ucsf(the three premier academic pathology programs.)

Also, not to start this, but I imagine there are some people at MGH, Penn, Stanford, and a few other places that might take umbrage to your assertion that those are the "three premier academic path programs"... The closer I get to interviews, the more I think trying to numerically rank programs is relatively pointless... but I digress.

Also important to note, as LADoc pointed out, that Dr. Smithies is a PhD, but still, good on him and good for UNC. Looking forward to my interview there.

As far as the H pylori guy, heh, he drank the stuff... now THAT'S science! 🙂

BH
 
Hmmm, def need to distinguish who is an actual pathologist who wins a Nobel vs. researchers in a pathology department. AFAIK, the only pathologist to win a Nobel is that guy who did work on H Pylori from Aus.

Yeah, people who are doing research of the caliber that is competitive for a nobel are highly unlikely to have any clinical role whatsoever in the department. Thus, very little impact on a resident's education. But it's nice to talk about!
 
Yeah, people who are doing research of the caliber that is competitive for a nobel are highly unlikely to have any clinical role whatsoever in the department. Thus, very little impact on a resident's education. But it's nice to talk about!

actually IIRC, the pathologist who won the nobel I know of was a run of the mill community pathologist who signed out general surg path and taught residents. but yeah that is absolutely the exception!!
 
actually IIRC, the pathologist who won the nobel I know of was a run of the mill community pathologist who signed out general surg path and taught residents. but yeah that is absolutely the exception!!

I think you're correct. The internal medicine doctor (Barry Marshall) that shared the Nobel prize then came to UVA in 1986 and stayed for 10 years before returning to Australia. When he first got here, he came by the path dept and showed off a bunch of positive stomach biopsies. Everyone was amazed at how obvious the bacteria were, once you knew to look for them.

I've heard Marshall talk a couple times (he's technically still on faculty here) and he's definitely an interesting guy.
 
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