Next Sunday night (US time), about 9 AM Monday Stockholm time, the Karolinska is going to wake up one to three biologists and announce they have won the Nobel Prize.
Thompson Reuters has their list based on citation, I call this hokey.
Here is Thompsons’s list with my thumb added where I think they may be right. Then I added my own guesses.
Finally, I have added some UW names I think may want to wait for the phone call.
This is unlikely.
SMS: Hynes was not among the discovers of the integrins and his excellent work has not been unique. Ruosalahti is rumored to want the prize BUT his word on the peptide RGD has not yielded much clinical result. Personally, I would put Mark Ginsberg here, his work on what he called cytoadhesins was seminal to the huge world of integrin signalling. Tekeichi did discover the cadherins but a nobel for them surely would need to include a prize for the signalling pathways that use beta catenin. I would also include John Harlan since he, with my wife as first author, described the first adhesion molecule that controls inflammatory responses.
Daniel K. Ludwig Professor for Cancer Research, David O. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA USA; also Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Distinguished Professor, Center for Nanomedicine, Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute, La Jolla, CA USA
Director, RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe, Japan
This is unlikley
SMS: I doubt this too, There already have been prizes for the signalling pathways controlled by the tyrosine kinases as well as for the ligands that stimulate them. The ony way I could see this is with Brian Druker.
American Cancer Society Professor, Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory, and Renato Dulbecco Chair, Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and Adjunct Professor, Section of Molecular Biology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA USA
Distinguished Scientist and Apotex Chair in Molecular Oncology, Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital, and Professor, Department of Medical Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SMS My only question here is whether Allis work is unque enough for a Nobel? A LOT of folks have contributed to epigenetics, including the recent amazing discoveries that lamin s .. a nuclear “structural” protein determine inherited aging!
Tri-Institutional Professor and Joy and Jack Fishman Professor, Head, Laboratory of Chromatin Biology and Epigenetics, Rockefeller University, NY USA
Distinguished Professor of Biological Chemistry, Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA
And here is my list:
Shinya Yamanaka, Irv Weissman, Reudi Yaenish Tokyo, Gladstone, Stanford, MIT the stem cell
Reudi Jaenish, MIY Beatrice Mintz, Fox Chase the trangenic mouse.
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A personal note: Goran Hansson, the Secretary General of the Nobel Committee, seated in the bottom middle of the photograph, is a former fellow of mine, a greatly admired colleague and a dear friend. Goran’s own work has been on the roll of the immune system in the etiology of vascular diseases, especially atherosclerosis.
- Eric Lander, Phil Green MIT, Harvard, UW human genome project
Ruslan Medzhitov Yale The innate immune system.
Jerry Nepom, UW, Ake Lernmark Upsalla, the type 1 diabets gene
- Brian Druker, anti kinase therapy in cancer Oregon (see comment about Tony Hunter above).
Earl Davies, UW, the coagulation cascade.
These UW Names Here Deserve Nobels:
Earl Davies, blood coagulation
Phil Green, genome informatics
John Harlan, endothelial cell interactions with leukocytes
Bonney Ramsey, cystic fibrosis
Jerry Nepom, immunology of type 1 diabetes
Lee Hood, Bob Waterston genome project
Arno Motulsky, Maynard Olsen, Mark Groudine not sure for what because they have done so much