Inside Science
/
Article

Three Share Nobel Prize In Chemistry For DNA-Repair Discoveries

OCT 07, 2015
Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich and Aziz Sancar’s win the award.
Inside Science Contributor
Three Share Nobel Prize In Chemistry For DNA-Repair Discoveries  lead image

Three Share Nobel Prize In Chemistry For DNA-Repair Discoveries lead image

(Inside Science) – The 2015 Nobel Prize in chemistry has been awarded to Swedish, American and Turkish-American chemists for their research into DNA repair.

The prize will be split jointly between Tomas Lindahl of the Francis Crick Institute and Clare Hall Laboratory in Hertfordshire, UK, Paul Modrich of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina, and Aziz Sancar of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill “for mechanistic studies of DNA repair.”

Their insights have led to important medical advances including treatments for cancer as well as fundamentally important information on how living cells function.

More details are available at http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/

Editor’s Note: Inside Science will provide detailed coverage of the 2015 Nobel Prize in a longer article to be issued later today.

More Science News
/
Article
Simulations show no drop on crossed-beam energy transfer compared to linear-polarized light but significantly reduced beam-to-beam power variations, pointing the way to more powerful lasers for fusion ignition.
/
Article
Two equations and one free parameter provide a surprisingly good mapping from laser to hohlraum radiation temperature pulses.
FYI
/
Article
Staff communications from December reveal deliberations over which programs to “defend” and which ones might be shuttered or transferred.
FYI
/
Article
Democrats used the opportunity to challenge the department’s decision-making on a host of science topics, including Genesis, clean-energy projects, and last year’s Climate Working Group report.
/
Article
The question is attracting attention amid rising energy use by classical computing data centers.
/
Article
To go beyond classical models and tie our understanding of gravity to the quantum world, experiments are needed.
/
Article
Coalescing at a relatively low temperature may have helped the moon become the only one in the solar system to develop a magnetic field.
/
Article