Your

Station

Listen OnlineNashville Jazz WorkshopContact Us

NewsletterJazz DatebookPlaylists

Corporate SupportPublic NewsroomPublic ArtsInside WMOT

Last updated 8:35PM ET
November 23, 2009
Search NewsRoom
Search NewsRoom
go
Advanced Search
Tools
Tools
Science
Science
2 Americans, 1 Japanese Scientist Share Nobel Chemistry Prize
(2008-10-08)
(Associated Press) -

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences says a Japanese man and two Americans have won the Nobel chemistry prize.

The academy says they shared the prize for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein, GFP, which was first seen in jellyfish.

The protein is a widely used laboratory tool to illuminate processes in living organisms, like development of brain cells or the spread of cancer cells.

The academy says the work of Japan's Osamu Shimomura and Americans Martin Chalfie and Roger Tsien has enabled "scientists to follow several different biological processes at the same time."

That means that researchers have been able to use GFP to track nerve cell damage from Alzheimer's disease or see how insulin-producing beta-cells are created in the pancreas of a growing embryo.

© Copyright 2009, Associated Press