From Deseret News archives:
2 Americans win Nobel for olfactory study
Duo solved puzzle of how odors trigger memory in people
The winners, who will share the $1.3 million award, were Dr. Richard Axel, 58, a professor at Columbia, and Dr. Linda B. Buck, 57, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Until publication of their fundamental paper in 1991, the sense of smell had been "the most enigmatic of our senses," the Nobel Assembly of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, said in recognizing the discovery that Axel and Buck made while working together at Columbia University in New York.
As the two scientists went on to work independently, the assembly said, "they have in several elegant, often parallel, studies clarified the olfactory system, from the molecular level to the organization of the cells."
Their work provides a molecular understanding of how people who smell a lilac in childhood can recognize the fragrance later in life and also recall associated memories.
"A good wine or a sun-ripe wild strawberry activates a whole array of odorant receptors, helping us to perceive the different odorant molecules," the assembly said.
Buck, who was born in Seattle, received degrees in psychology and microbiology from the University of Washington, and a doctorate in immunology from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Yearning to learn the techniques of molecular biology, she said, she joined Axel's laboratory, working on the side to understand "how the nervous system deals with the tremendous problem of diversity."
After "trying a number of crazy ideas," she said, she became so fascinated with the olfactory system that "I was totally hooked and obsessed in finding the receptors, and Axel provided the funding so I could keep working on it."
Axel credited Buck for coming up with "an extremely clever twist" by making three assumptions that allowed her to zero in on a group of genes that appeared to code for the odorant receptor proteins.
Comments
- Today on TV 12:49 a.m.
- Wanted: Bank robber with bad breath 12:40 a.m.
- Philippine police clash with clan 12:28 a.m.
- Officer responding to call killed 12:28 a.m.
- Editorial: Fine-tune state workweek 12:18 a.m.
- Let's keep energy money in the U.S. 12:18 a.m.
- How to pay for the war 12:17 a.m.
- Feast of Guadalupe nourishes soul 12:17 a.m.
- Obama's strategy is a road map 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: 'Political priestcraft' 12:17 a.m.
- Y., U. to learn bowl destinations
- BYU and Utah's bowl games
- BYU professor remembered
- The forgotten ship: USS Utah
- Branch president without a congregation
- Utahns want health care reform bills
- BYU basketball: Cougars crush Dons
- Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world
- Jazz upset by Wolves
- Urn of baby rests with sailors
- Letters: Liberal because LDS
257 - Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
214 - Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
189 - Aggies shoot past Cougars
179 - N.Y. Senate rejects gay marriage
130 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
113 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
110 - Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan
105 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
97 - Harpring's NBA career is over
95
First, a big thank you to all who posted questions here for me to ask...
Sorry earlier I meant to say that tracks seems to travel at 35 miles an hour...
'Peter Frumhoff, the director of science and policy at the Union of...
The Non-BCS crowd ought to create their own title game...their own brand, and...
That's the whole of your defense of GOP resistance to badly-needed ethics...
Your criticism should hardly be focused on Bennett alone. What about all the...
'Wired's Threat Level blog reported on November 20 that Gavin Schmidt, a...
The reality of climate change is supported by multiple lines of evidence and...
I had the priviledge of staying in the LeBaron home on severl occasions as I...
So the unemployment rate has dropped to "just" 10%, huh? I wonder what that...
Ahh for the love of money...what money can buy!!!




You can be the first to comment on this story.