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노벨생리의학상 기생충연구 캠벨·오무라·투유유 공동수상

By KH디지털2

Published : Oct. 6, 2015 - 11:36

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2015년 노벨생리의학상은 말라리아와 같 은 기생충으로 인한 전염병 치료약 연구에 헌신한 아일랜드와 일본, 중국의  연구자 들에게 돌아갔다.

스웨덴 카롤린스카 의대 노벨위원회는 5일(현지시간) 아일랜드 태생의 미국  시 민권자인 윌리엄 캠벨(85) 미국 뉴저지 주 매디슨 드루대학 명예 펠로우, 오무라 사토시(大村智·80) 일본 기타사토대 명예교수, 중국의  투유유(屠<口+幼><口+幼>·85·여) 중국전통의학연구원 교수 등 3명을 올해 노벨생리의학상 공동 수상자로  결정 했다고 발표했다.

중국 출신 연구자가 노벨 생리의학상을 수상한 것은 이번이 처음이며, 과학분야 노벨상 수상도 처음이다. 중국의 대표적인 여성 과학자인 투 교수는 아울러 역대 12번째 노벨생리의학상 여성 수상자가 됐다.

캠벨과 오무라 교수는 '아버멕틴'(Avermectin)이라는 항생물질을 발견한 공로로 상의 절반을 공동 수상했다.

아버멕틴을 개량한 이버멕틴은 눈을 멀게 할 수도 있는 열대 피부병인 사상충증 (river blindness)과 상피병(elephantiasis·림프관 사상충증) 등 주로  아프리카에 서 발생하는 기생충에 의한 전염병에 특효가 있다. 

또 투 교수는 학질모기가 옮기는 전염병인 말라리아 환자의 사망률을  획기적으 로 낮춘 특효약 '아르테미시닌'(Artemisinin)이라는 약을 발견해 나머지 절반을  수 상했다.

오무라 교수는 NHK와의 인터뷰에서 "나는 미생물로부터 많은 것을 배웠고  그것 들에 의존해 왔다"며 "미생물들에 이 상을 돌린다"고 말했고, 은퇴한 캠벨 교수는 수상 소식에 깜짝 놀랐다며 33년 동안 재직했던 메르크연구소 동료에게 영광을 돌렸 다.

노벨위원회는 "올해 수상자들은 가장 파괴적인 기생충 관련 질병의 치료법을 획 기적으로 발전시킴으로써 매년 수백만명에게 영향을 끼치는 질병에 맞설 새롭고  강 력한 수단을 인류에게 제공했다"고 선정 이유를 밝혔다.

특히 모기가 전파하는 원충에 의해 발생하는 말라리아는 지난 10여년간 치료법 개발에서 상당한 진전이 있었지만 지금도 매년 아프리카 등지를 중심으로 유아,  어 린이 등 50만명 이상이 이로 인해 희생되는 등 근절되지 않고 있는 질병이다.

노벨위원회는 "투 교수의 발견은 지난 10년 간 말라리아 사망자 수를 눈에 띄게 감소시켰다"며 "치료를 통해 아이들이 학교에 가고 어른들도 일터에 나갈 수 있게 함으로써 가난에서 벗어나게 하고 경제 발전에도 기여하는 등 사회 전체적으로도 긍 정적 영향을 끼쳤다"고 평가했다.

수상자들에게는 800만 크로나(96만 달러, 한화 약 11억2천만원)의 상금이  주어 진다. 800만 크로나의 절반은 캠벨과 오무라 교수가, 나머지 절반은 투 교수가 각각 나눠 가지게 된다.

이날 노벨생리의학상은 올해 노벨상 가운데 가장 먼저 발표됐다.  노벨생리의학 상에 이어 물리학상(6일), 화학상(7일), 평화상(9일), 경제학상(12일)이 차례로  발 표된다. 문학상 발표 날짜는 아직 확정되지 않았으나 8일일 것으로 예상된다.

시상식은 노벨상 창시자 알프레드 노벨의 기일인 12월10일 스웨덴 스톡홀름과 노르웨이 오슬로에서 열린다.

지난해 노벨생리의학상은 뇌세포 안에서 위치정보 세포를 발견하고 작동 메커니 즘을 밝혀낸 미국의 존 오키프 박사와 부부 과학자인 노르웨이 마이브리트 모세르, 에드바르 모세르 박사 등 3명이 수상했다. (연합)

<관련 영문 기사>

3 share Nobel medicine prize for tropical disease drugs

The Nobel prize in medicine went Monday to three scientists hailed as “heroes in the truest sense of the word” for saving millions of lives with the creation of the world's leading malaria-fighting drug and another that has nearly wiped out two devastating tropical diseases.

Tu Youyou _ the first-ever Chinese medicine laureate _ turned to ancient texts to produce artemesinin, a drug that is now the top treatment for malaria.  Inspired by traditional Chinese medicine, Tu discovered that a compound from the wormwood plant was highly effective against the malaria parasite, while working on a project for the Chinese military during the Cultural Revolution.  

She will share the 8 million Swedish kronor (about $960,000) award with Japanese microbiologist Satoshi Omura and William Campbell, an Irish-born U. S.  scientist.

Omura and Campbell created the drug avermectin, whose derivatives have nearly rid the planet of river blindness and lymphatic filarisis, diseases caused by parasitic worms and spread by mosquitos and flies.  They affect millions of people in Africa, Latin America and Asia, leaving sufferers blind or disfigured and often unable to work.  

The Nobel committee said the winners, who are all in their 80s and made their breakthroughs in the 1970s and ‘80s, had given humankind powerful tools: “The consequences in terms of improved human health and reduced suffering are immeasurable,” the committee said.

The Carter Center called the three laureates “heroes in the truest sense of the word, saving lives through medicine. “Campbell, 85, is a research fellow emeritus at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey.  He told the AP he made his main discovery in 1975 while working at pharmaceutical company Merck.

“It was a great team effort,” said Campbell, who now lives in North Andover, Massachusetts.  He said the award came as a “huge surprise. “
Omura, 80, is a professor emeritus at Kitasato University in Japan and is from the central prefecture of Yamanashi.  He wondered whether he deserved the prize. 

“I have learned so much from microorganisms and I have depended on them, so I would much rather give the prize to microorganisms,” Omura told Japanese broadcaster NHK. 

Working in the 1970s, Omura isolated new strains of Streptomyces bacteria and cultured them so that they could be analyzed for their impact against harmful microorganisms, the Nobel committee said.

Omura said the crucial strain was found in a soil sample from a golf course near Tokyo.  He said he always carries around a plastic bag in his wallet so he can collect soil samples.

Campbell showed that one of those cultures was remarkably efficient against parasites in animals, the committee said.  The bioactive agent was purified, named avermectin and modified to a compound that effectively killed parasitic larvae, leading to the creation of a new class of drugs.

Today, its derivative ivermectin is considered a highly effective preventive treatment against river blindness and lymphatic filariasis, the committee said. 

“(Ivermectin) reduces the number of parasites in the blood so that when a mosquito bites someone, it cannot transmit the disease to someone else,” said Dr.  Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.  He said mass distribution campaigns have given out ivermectin for free to 450 million people in efforts to eliminate both river blindness and lymphatic filariasis. 

Hotez said that in parts of Africa, adult sufferers of river blindness are often led around with a stick by a young child.  Until ivermectin came along, Hotez said there was no way to effectively prevent the disease. 

Tu, 84, is a researcher at the China Academy of Chinese Medical  Sciences.

As a junior researcher, she was recruited by Chairman Mao's government to work on a military project in 1969 to find malaria drugs.

She turned to herbal medicine to discover a new malarial agent in an extract from the sweet wormwood plant.  The agent, artemisinin (pronounced ar-tuh-MIHS'-ihn-ihn), was highly effective against malaria, a disease that was on the rise in the 1960s, the committee said. 

Malaria is a mosquito-borne disease that still kills around 500,000 people a year, mostly in Africa, despite efforts to control it.

Colin Sutherland, a reader in parasitology at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that the impact of artemesinin has been profound and changed nearly every country's malaria treatment protocol.

Still, artemisinin resistance has already been confirmed in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

There have been several previous Nobel Prizes for malaria research, including the 1902 award to British army surgeon Ronald Ross, who discovered that the disease is transmitted by mosquitos.

The last time a Chinese citizen won a Nobel was in 2012, when Mo Yan got the literature award.  But China has been yearning for a Nobel Prize in science.  This was the first Nobel Prize given to a Chinese scientist for work carried out within China.

“This is indeed a glorious moment,” said Li Chenjian, a vice provost at prestigious Peking University.  “This also is an acknowledgement to the traditional Chinese medicine, for the work began with herbal medicine. “

Stephen Ward, deputy director of Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, said the prize confirms that Chinese scientists “did fantastic work in the 1960s even when they were effectively ignored by the rest of the world. “

The medicine award was the first Nobel Prize to be announced.  The winners of the physics, chemistry and peace prizes are set to be announced later this week.  The economics prize will be announced next Monday.  No date has been set yet for the literature prize, but it is expected to be announced on Thursday. 

Besides the cash prize, each winner also gets a diploma and a gold medal at the annual award ceremony on Dec.  10, the anniversary of the death of prize founder Alfred Nobel. (AP)