James Rothman, Randy Schekman, and Thomas Sudhof
Three scientists have won the Nobel Prize for medicine or physiology after discovering how cells precisely transport material.
James Rothman and Randy Schekman, both from the US, and Thomas Sudhof, from Germany, shared the prize.
They found the way "vesicles" act like a fleet of ships transporting their goods to the exact destination.
It is crucial for the way the brain communicates, the release of hormones and parts of the immune system.
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Prof Randy Schekman Nobel Prize WinnerMy first reaction was 'Oh, my God! That was also my second reaction”
The billions of cells which make
up the body are not empty blobs, instead they are packed with precise
machinery. In order for a cell to function properly it needs the right
materials in the right place at the right time.
Vesicles are tiny bubbles of fat which act as the cell's
internal shipping service. They can send material such as enzymes,
neurotransmitters and hormones, around the cell. Or they can fuse with
the outer surface of the cell and release their contents into the wider
body.
The prize committee said the findings: "Had a major impact on
our understanding of how cargo is delivered with timing and precision
within and outside the cell.
"Without this wonderfully precise organisation, the cell would lapse into chaos."
A defective vesicle transport system is implicated in diabetes and brain disorders.
'Oh my God'
Prof James Rothman, from Yale University, found proteins
embedded in the vesicles which act as the docking mechanism meaning the
cargo is released in the correct location.
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Dr Lisa Swanton University of ManchesterThey have revolutionised understanding of how cells are organised which is fundamental to huge number of diseases”
Prof Randy Schekman, from the
University of California at Berkeley, discovered the genes which
regulated the transport system in yeast. He found that mutations in
three genes resulted in a "situation resembling a poorly planned public
transport system".
After hearing of the award he said: "My first reaction was 'Oh, my God! That was also my second reaction."
Prof Thomas Sudhof, originally from Germany but now at
Stanford University in the US, made breakthroughs in how the transport
system works in the brain so that neurotransmitters are released at the
precise time.
Dr Lisa Swanton, from the University of Manchester, said:
"Vesicles are like a postman's bag, they have to get to a specific
address.
"They have worked out the mechanism of sending to the right location, they have advanced the field enormously.
"They have revolutionised understanding of how cells are organised which is fundamental to huge number of diseases."
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