• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Creators of molecule-building precision tools win Chemistry Nobel

October 6, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

October 6, 2021

By Niklas Pollard, Ludwig Burger and Simon Johnson

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – German Benjamin List and Scottish-born David MacMillan won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Chemistry on Wednesday for developing new tools for building molecules that have helped make new drugs and are more environmentally friendly.

Their work on asymmetric organocatalysis, which the award-giving body described as “a new and ingenious tool for molecule building”, has also helped in the development of plastics, perfumes and flavours.

“Organic catalysts can be used to drive multitudes of chemical reactions,” the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. “Using these reactions, researchers can now more efficiently construct anything from new pharmaceuticals to molecules that can capture light in solar cells.”

Catalysts are molecules that remain stable while enabling or speeding up chemical reactions performed in labs or large industrial reactors. Before the laureates’ breakthrough findings at the turn of the millennium, only certain metals and complex enzymes were known to do the trick.

The academy said the new generation of small-molecule catalysts were more friendly for the environment and cheaper to produce, and praised the precision of the new tools.

Before asymmetric catalysis, man-made catalysed substances would often contain not only the desired molecule but also its unwanted mirror image. The sedative thalidomide, which caused deformities in human embryos around six decades ago, was a catastrophic example, it said.

“The fact is, it is estimated that 35 per cent of the world’s total GDP in some way involves chemical catalysis,” it added.

List, 53, said the academy caught up with him while on vacation in Amsterdam with his wife, who in the past had liked to joke that somebody might be calling him from Sweden.

“But today we didn’t even make the joke and certainly didn’t anticipate this – and then Sweden appears on my phone… it was a very special moment that I will never forget,” he said, dialling into the media briefing announcing the winners.

List, 53, is director of the Max-Planck-Institut fuer Kohlenforschung, Muelheim an der Ruhr, Germany.

He and MacMillan share the prestigious 10-million Swedish crown ($1.14-million) prize in equal parts for breakthroughs achieved independently of one another.

‘NOT A STUPID IDEA’

“I am shocked and stunned and overjoyed,” MacMillan, who is also 53, said in statement from Princeton, the U.S. university where he works.

“It was funny because I got some texts from people in Sweden really early this morning and I thought they were pranking me so I went back to sleep. Then my phone starting going crazy.”

List said he did not initially know that MacMillan was working on the same subject and figured his hunch might just be a “stupid idea” until it worked.

“Organocatalysis was a pretty simple idea that really sparked a lot of different research, and the part we’re just so proud of is that you don’t have to have huge amounts of equipment and huge amounts of money to do fine things in chemistry,” MacMillan said.

Some scientists had suggested the rapid development of mRNA (Messenger ribonucleic acid) COVID-19 vaccines would be recognised this year, also possibly in the medicine category, which was awarded for discoveries on the sense of touch.

“This is an extremely important topic we’re thinking about, but there will be more years, more Nobel prizes,” said Pernilla Wittung Stafshede of the Swedish Academy of Sciences.

The prizes, for achievements in science, literature and peace, were created and funded in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel. They have been awarded since 1901, with the economics prize first handed out in 1969.

($1 = 8.8020 Swedish crowns)

(Ludwig Burger reported from Frankfurt; additional reporting by Johan Ahlander in Gothenburg, Terje Solsvik in Oslo and Peter Szekely in New York; editing by Timothy Heritage)

Source Link Creators of molecule-building precision tools win Chemistry Nobel

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Printify bags $45M, led by Index, to ride the custom printing boom
  2. Cathay Pacific to close London pilot base, review U.S. bases
  3. Latin America’s second wave of digital transformation
  4. Recruiting operations platform ModernLoop lands $3.3M to create better technical hiring experiences

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • There’s A Very Intriguing Reason Why Great White Sharks Have White Bellies
  • NASA’s Space Probe Finds Evidence Of A “Helicity Barrier” In The Sun’s 2 Million Kelvin Atmosphere
  • Why Do Some People Talk In Their Sleep?
  • Can Animals Think? Understanding Them Could Be Key To Communicating With Aliens One Day
  • The World’s Only White Giraffe Has A Tragic Story
  • Are You More Likely To Be Killed By An Elephant Or An Asteroid? RFK Jr Pulls Millions Of Dollars Of mRNA Vaccine Funding, And Much More This Week
  • ChatGPT Poisoned A Guy Into Psychosis, Case Study Shows
  • 8 Key DNA Regions More Likely To Be Altered In People With ME/CFS, Finds 27,000-Strong Study
  • Quantum “Schrödinger’s Cat” Survives For Mind-Blowing 23 Minutes In Record-Breaking Experiment
  • World-First Estimate Shows Over 13 Million Babies Born Through Assisted Reproduction
  • Californian Wild Pigs Found With Bright Blue Flesh, Officials Warn Public To “Be Aware”
  • Dancing Cockatoos, Spider Schlongs, And Will I Be Hit By An Asteroid?
  • NASA Releases Closest Ever Images Of The Sun, Snapped As Probe Travels Through Its Atmosphere
  • Grizzly Adams: The Wild Truth Behind The Man, The Myth, And The Beard
  • Sergei Krikalev: A Cosmonaut Left Stranded In Space When The Soviet Union Collapsed
  • “We Have No Idea”: Decades-Old Mystery About Great White Sharks Just Got Even Stranger
  • Sharks Don’t Have Bones To Fossilize, So How Do We Know Megalodon’s Size?
  • The Year’s Best Meteor Shower Is About To Hit Its Peak – How To Bag Yourself A “Fireball”
  • “Smoking Gun” Causing Parts Of Antarctic Ocean To Shine Weirdly Bright In Satellite Images Discovered
  • Watch: Endangered Foa’s Red Colobus Monkey Caught On Film For The First Time
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version