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
A simple, low-cost method uses standing Scholte waves to manipulate microparticles.
/
Article
Despite being in the prototype phase, miniature medical robots could help reduce deaths from ailments like cardiovascular disease in the near future.
/
Article
Model derived from the controlled growth process framework aims to help policymakers assess opinion of new laws by analyzing text from media outlets.
/
Article
An improved model identifies power-reducing dust accumulation on photovoltaic modules, helping engineers know when the modules need cleaning.
/
Article
A half century after the discovery of Hawking radiation, we are still dealing with the quantum puzzle it exposed.
/
Article
A major upgrade to the 15-year-old detector will aid in the study of neutrino oscillations.
/
Article
The physicist-philosopher’s work on understanding climate change is also relevant for adaptation measures in health, law, and the economy.
/
Article