PROUD MOMENT – AT 8:45 A.M. ET: We are Americans, and we have a right to celebrate our nation's accomplishments. This is one of those moments:
STOCKHOLM — Americans Robert Lefkowitz and Brian Kobilka won the 2012 Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday for studies of protein receptors that let body cells sense and respond to outside signals. Such studies are key for developing better drugs.
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said the two researchers had made groundbreaking discoveries, mainly in the 1980s, on an important family of receptors, known as G-protein-coupled receptors.
About half of all medications act on these receptors, so learning about them will help scientists to come up with better drugs.
The human body has about 1,000 kinds of such receptors, structures on the surface of cells, which let the body respond to a wide variety of chemical signals, like adrenaline. Some receptors are in the nose, tongue and eyes, and let us sense smells, tastes and light.
Lefkowitz, 69, is an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and professor at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.
Kobilka, 57, is a professor at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.
COMMENT: We note that David J. Wineland, also an American, yesterday shared the Nobel Prize in Physics. The United States has won, over the decades, an extraordinary number of Nobel prizes in science and economics. We're still doin' it. Even as we agonize over problems and crises, and yes, failures, let us not forget the successes and triumphs that occur in America every day.
October 10, 2012
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