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Nobel prize-winning medical research long and costly

Tue Oct 6, 2009 6:15pm IST
 
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By Peter Henderson

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The Nobel-winning medical science that points the way to a cancer cure was sparked by curiosity, not business sense, a new laureate said on Monday.

Elizabeth Blackburn won the Nobel prize for medicine together with Carol Greider and Jack Szostak for work on the existence and nature of telomerase, an enzyme that helps prevent the fraying of chromosomes and is core to new work on aging and cancer.

Federal research grants made the work possible, and that money is becoming more important as the California public education system which nurtured the science struggles with budget cuts that will probably reduce the wages of Blackburn and her colleagues.

Now a professor of biology and physiology at the University of California, San Francisco, Blackburn's federal grant application had proposed understanding how the ends of the chromosomes worked.

"I was just following my nose," she told a news conference after the announcement of her prize by the Nobel committee in Stockholm. "That would look pretty bad in a business plan," she said, noting that basic research is long and costly.

Blackburn's work in the field dates to the late 1970s, and about three decades later a therapy based on the enzyme is in trials by biotech firms Merck and Geron.

Now the University of California system is chopping salaries and raising the fees that have made it unusually affordable, raising questions over whether Blackburn and her colleagues will face wage cuts for future research.

"Get a Nobel prize, have a pay cut," quipped Blackburn. "It sort of breaks my heart to see it being under attack."   Continued...

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