The China Mail - Nobel winner's ingenious chemistry could lead to cancer breakthroughs

USD -
AED 3.672501
AFN 62.000162
ALL 81.755494
AMD 369.961867
ANG 1.789884
AOA 917.99979
ARS 1416.500103
AUD 1.397849
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.700803
BAM 1.672231
BBD 2.013706
BDT 122.949593
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377252
BIF 2978.419604
BMD 1
BND 1.276607
BOB 6.908463
BRL 5.001794
BSD 0.999756
BTN 94.471971
BWP 13.52189
BYN 2.82083
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010807
CAD 1.367635
CDF 2324.999549
CHF 0.790895
CLF 0.022946
CLP 898.35967
CNY 6.82315
CNH 6.841935
COP 3619.73
CRC 454.776694
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.27703
CZK 20.866998
DJF 178.039031
DKK 6.396396
DOP 59.397137
DZD 132.622541
EGP 52.791801
ERN 15
ETB 156.109544
EUR 0.85617
FJD 2.20125
FKP 0.737964
GBP 0.742445
GEL 2.685025
GGP 0.737964
GHS 11.098001
GIP 0.737964
GMD 72.999571
GNF 8773.197331
GTQ 7.638607
GYD 209.169998
HKD 7.83625
HNL 26.576093
HRK 6.4481
HTG 130.969532
HUF 312.788998
IDR 17283.8
ILS 2.98965
IMP 0.737964
INR 94.638305
IQD 1309.695319
IRR 1315000.000029
ISK 122.579728
JEP 0.737964
JMD 157.527307
JOD 0.709029
JPY 159.776003
KES 129.210102
KGS 87.429601
KHR 4006.549332
KMF 420.00031
KPW 899.995813
KRW 1477.655041
KWD 0.30786
KYD 0.833202
KZT 458.273661
LAK 21948.049727
LBP 89581.388191
LKR 318.685688
LRD 183.459019
LSL 16.586995
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.344185
MAD 9.253795
MDL 17.291603
MGA 4156.192821
MKD 52.714856
MMK 2100.039346
MNT 3596.354975
MOP 8.070247
MRU 39.761967
MUR 46.779931
MVR 15.459981
MWK 1733.606365
MXN 17.456585
MYR 3.95198
MZN 63.898008
NAD 16.586995
NGN 1371.170263
NIO 36.790828
NOK 9.319399
NPR 151.155324
NZD 1.704195
OMR 0.384504
PAB 0.999761
PEN 3.504747
PGK 4.343421
PHP 61.283999
PKR 278.626715
PLN 3.63685
PYG 6267.180239
QAR 3.634568
RON 4.360101
RSD 100.498211
RUB 75.101634
RWF 1461.458552
SAR 3.750872
SBD 8.048583
SCR 13.70508
SDG 600.502622
SEK 9.28945
SGD 1.278235
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.602706
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 571.399257
SRD 37.364995
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.947601
SVC 8.748402
SYP 110.549271
SZL 16.5734
THB 32.555007
TJS 9.378107
TMT 3.505
TND 2.915516
TOP 2.40776
TRY 45.053699
TTD 6.798138
TWD 31.566497
TZS 2605.123016
UAH 44.060757
UGX 3719.267945
UYU 39.45844
UZS 12027.343032
VES 483.93447
VND 26348
VUV 118.225603
WST 2.727813
XAF 560.845941
XAG 0.01379
XAU 0.000219
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.801836
XDR 0.697718
XOF 560.850736
XPF 101.967792
YER 238.601269
ZAR 16.63475
ZMK 9001.248714
ZMW 18.969203
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.82

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2300

    15.17

    -1.52%

  • BCC

    -0.9900

    82.87

    -1.19%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    23.64

    +0.34%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    87.23

    0%

  • GSK

    0.5200

    54.74

    +0.95%

  • RELX

    -0.2050

    36.185

    -0.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.2

    -0.26%

  • RIO

    -1.7850

    98.165

    -1.82%

  • JRI

    0.0110

    12.841

    +0.09%

  • BTI

    0.6650

    57.985

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    15.39

    -0.78%

  • BP

    0.4200

    46.39

    +0.91%

  • AZN

    -0.0800

    187.43

    -0.04%

Nobel winner's ingenious chemistry could lead to cancer breakthroughs
Nobel winner's ingenious chemistry could lead to cancer breakthroughs / Photo: © Stanford News Service/AFP

Nobel winner's ingenious chemistry could lead to cancer breakthroughs

"All kinds of crazy things" is how Carolyn Bertozzi, a 2022 Nobel laureate, describes her life's work. Actually performing "chemistry in cells and in people."

Text size:

When she started her research in 1997, the Stanford professor was aiming only to observe the evolution of certain molecules on the surface of cancer cells.

Today, thanks to her discoveries, at least two companies -- including one she co-founded -- are developing innovative cancer treatments.

The multitude of applications made possible by her findings are impressive: delivering treatments with extreme precision, understanding better how drugs act inside the body, visualizing certain bacteria, to name a few.

"I can't even really enumerate them. The vast majority of those applications I would never have foreseen," she told AFP in an interview.

The Nobel Prize committee recognized Bertozzi's pioneering advances on Wednesday, making her only the eighth woman to win the chemistry prize, at just 55 years old.

- Lego pieces -

Her journey began when she found she had a passion for organic chemistry, while taking pre-medicine courses at Harvard.

The subject is notoriously -- many say fiendishly -- difficult, but she credits an "amazing professor," the late David Evans, for bringing it to life -- and changing the course of her life.

"I said, forget the med school thing. I'm going to be a chemist," said Bertozzi, whose sister is a professor of applied mathematics, and father a retired professor of physics.

After completing her post-doctorate and joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, she wanted to take a closer look at glycans: complex carbohydrates, or sugars, located on the surface of cells, which "go through structural changes" when they become cancerous.

At the time, "there was no tool to image sugars, like in a microscope, for example," she said.

She had an idea that would require two chemical substances that fit together perfectly, like pieces of lego.

The first lego is fed to cells via a sugar. The cell metabolizes it and places it on the tip of the glycan. The second piece of lego, a fluorescent molecule, is injected into the body.

The two lego pieces click together, and voila: hidden glycans reveal themselves under a microscope.

This technique is inspired by "click chemistry" developed independently by Denmark's Morten Meldal and American Barry Sharpless -- Bertozzi's co-winners. But their discoveries relied on using copper as a catalyst, which is toxic to the body.

One of Bertozzi's great leaps was achieving the same type of ultra-efficient reaction without copper.

The other tour de force: making it all happen without wreaking havoc with other processes in the body.

"The beauty of it is that you can take the two Legos and click them together, even if they're surrounded by millions of other very similar plastic toys," she explained.

She coined the term "bioorthogonal chemistry," meaning a reaction that doesn't interfere with other biochemical processes. Perfecting the technique took 10 years.

- 'Cycle of science' -

Researchers are now leveraging these breakthroughs to develop cancer treatments.

Glycans on cancer cells "are able to hide the cancer cell from the immune system -- and so your body can't fight it, it can't see it," she explains.

Using bioorthogonal chemistry, "we made a new type of medicine, which basically acts like a lawnmower," says Bertozzi.

The first lego attaches to the cancer cell's surface, and the second, which clips onto it, is equipped with an enzyme that "mows off the sugars as if they're just grass, it cuts the grass and the sugars fall off," she says with a smile.

The drug is currently being tested in the early stages of a clinical trial.

Another company is seeking to use bioorthogonal chemistry to better target cancer treatment. The first lego piece is injected into a tumor, then a second, which carries the drug, attaches itself and acts only on its target.

"So that allows the oncologist to treat the tumor and kill the tumor without exposing the person's entire body to a toxic chemical," she says.

"What the future holds is hopefully an impact in human health," says Bertozzi. "But the people who decide that more so than myself, are the students and postdocs that join my lab."

Hundreds of them, current and former, filled her email box with messages of congratulations this morning.

"That really is the cycle of science -- it's being mentored and then mentoring" she adds. And "mentoring students gives you an opportunity to amplify the impact of your science."

C.Mak--ThChM