-
Kooij wins Tour de France 5th stage in chaotic sprint finish
-
France lose appeal against Olise booking at World Cup
-
Trump says Ukraine can make Patriot missiles
-
Putellas joins star cast at London City Lionesses
-
Teenager arrested after two girls wounded in Germany school attack
-
Oil back at $80, stocks slide as Trump says Iran ceasefire over
-
Farage vs Count Binface: hard-right leader's UK poll gambit
-
Vast crowds mourn Khamenei in Iraq's holy cities
-
Hong Kong's Robert Wun: the bold Millennial conquering Haute Couture
-
Uber Eats, Deliveroo say will give France drivers break when too hot
-
IMF cuts 2026 world growth forecast, flags risks from new Mideast fighting
-
Trump tempers fury to end NATO summit on high note
-
Kostyuk sets up Wimbledon semi-final against Noskova
-
Oil shoots back up, stocks slide as Trump says Iran ceasefire over
-
Noskova reaches first Wimbledon semi-final
-
Kostyuk powers into second straight Slam semi-final at Wimbledon
-
Air Canada taps new CEO to replace chief who couldn't speak French
-
Israeli jails a 'graveyard,' says freed Palestinian journalist
-
Istanbul mayor ejected from court in corruption case
-
Family of last woman executed in UK wins posthumous pardon
-
Landslide kills eight at refugee school in Bangladesh
-
'Serial killer' German doctor given life sentence for 15 murders
-
Cleary leads NSW past Queensland to regain State of Origin crown
-
What is going on with Farage's UK election gambit?
-
MEXC Adds Nine Ondo Tokenized Stock and ETF Trading Pairs Tied to AI Infrastructure Demand
-
Dalic quits after 'incredible era' as Croatia coach
-
Oil prices surge, stocks slide as Trump says Iran ceasefire over
-
Bayeux tapestry to arrive in London in secret, high-stakes operation
-
Sunken wrecks, hot seas threaten fishermen on Italian isle
-
Messi World Cup magic masks familiar penalty frailty
-
Rescuers search for survivors of China storms as super typhoon nears
-
Trump lashes out at allies as key NATO summit begins
-
Egypt file complaint against referee after controversial World Cup exit
-
Swiss party into the night after reaching World Cup quarter-finals
-
Apple loses challenge against EU digital competition rules
-
Trump says Iran ceasefire 'over' after fighting flares
-
Trump says Iran ceasefire 'is over'
-
Thai beer dynasty mother drops 'ungrateful child' case against son
-
Rescuers search for missing in China storms after 100,000 flee
-
France v Morocco rematch as World Cup quarter-finals get under way
-
OpenAI to launch new model after US freeze
-
Modi visits Australia for minerals talks and rockstar welcome
-
UK museums at 'sharp end' of climate change challenge
-
Sensors, early starts: how Spain keeps working when heat hits
-
In Mauritania, Imraguen people's desert-ocean paradise under threat
-
Kenya Rastafarians hope for freedom to smoke
-
Iraq's holy cities host funeral processions for Khamenei
-
Pacific nation of Tuvalu condemns Chinese missile launch into Pacific
-
Rescuers search for missing in China storms after 100,000 evacuated
-
How a viral post sparked India's Gen-Z protest
Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines
Hungarian-born scientist Katalin Kariko's obsession with researching a substance called mRNA to fight disease once cost her a faculty position at a prestigious US university, which dismissed the idea as a dead end.
Now, her pioneering work -- which paved the way for the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines -- has won her the Nobel Prize in Medicine.
Kariko, 68, spent much of the 1990s writing grant applications to fund her research into "messenger ribonucleic acid" -- genetic molecules that tell cells what proteins to make, essential to keeping our bodies alive and healthy.
She believed mRNA held the key to treating diseases where having more of the right kind of protein can help -- like repairing the brain after a stroke.
But the University of Pennsylvania, where Kariko was on track for a professorship, decided to pull the plug after the grant rejections piled up.
"I was up for promotion, and then they just demoted me and expected that I would walk out the door," she told AFP in an interview from her home in Philadelphia in December 2020.
Kariko didn't yet have a green card and needed a job to renew her visa. She also knew she wouldn't be able to put her daughter through college without the hefty staff discount.
She decided to persist as a lower-rung researcher, scraping by on a meagre salary.
It was a low point in her life and career, but "I just thought...you know, the (lab) bench is here, I just have to do better experiments," she said.
The determination runs in the family -- her daughter Susan Francia did go to UPenn, where she earned a master's degree, and won gold medals with the US Olympic rowing team in 2008 and 2012.
- Twin breakthroughs -
By the late 1980s, much of the scientific community was focused on using DNA to deliver gene therapy, but Kariko believed that mRNA was also promising since most diseases are not hereditary and don't need solutions that permanently alter our genetics.
First though, she had to overcome a major problem: in animal experiments, synthetic mRNA was causing a massive inflammatory response as the immune system sensed an invader and rushed to fight it.
Kariko, together with her main collaborator and co-winner Drew Weissman, discovered that one of the four building blocks of the synthetic mRNA was at fault -- and they could overcome the problem by swapping it out with a modified version.
They published a paper on the breakthrough in 2005. Then, in 2015, they found a new way to deliver mRNA into mice, using a fatty coating called "lipid nanoparticles" that prevent the mRNA from degrading, and help place it inside the right part of cells.
Both these innovations were key to the Covid-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech, where Kariko is now a senior vice president, as well as the shots produced by Moderna.
Both work by giving human cells the instructions to make a surface protein of the coronavirus, which simulates an infection and trains the immune system for when it encounters the real virus.
- New treatments -
Though she does not want to make too much of it, as a foreign-born woman in a male-dominated field, Kariko occasionally felt underestimated -- saying people would approach after lectures and ask "Who's your supervisor?"
"They were always thinking, 'That woman with the accent, there must be somebody behind her who is smarter or something,'" she said.
Yet the Nobel is just the latest accolade for Kariko, who has won the Breakthrough Prize, the L'Oreal-UNESCO prize for women in science awards, among many others.
It is a far cry from the time when her late mother would call every year after prize announcements to ask why she hadn't been chosen.
"I never in my life get (federal) grants, I am nobody, not even faculty," she would reply with a laugh.
To which her mother would reply: "But you work so hard!"
M.White--AT