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7 October 2002
The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet
has today decided to award
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine for 2002
jointly to
Sydney Brenner, H. Robert Horvitz and John E. Sulston
for their discoveries concerning "genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death"
The human body consists of hundreds of cell
types, all originating from the fertilized egg. During the
embryonic and foetal periods, the number of cells increase
dramatically. The cells mature and become specialized to form the
various tissues and organs of the body. Large numbers of cells
are formed also in the adult body. In parallel with this
generation of new cells, cell death is a normal process, both in
the foetus and adult, to maintain the appropriate number of cells
in the tissues. This delicate, controlled elimination of cells is
called programmed cell death.
This year's Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine have made
seminal discoveries concerning the genetic regulation of organ
development and programmed cell death. By establishing and using
the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans as an experimental
model system, possibilities were opened to follow cell division
and differentiation from the fertilized egg to the adult. The
Laureates have identified key genes regulating organ development
and programmed cell death and have shown that corresponding genes
exist in higher species, including man. The discoveries are
important for medical research and have shed new light on the
pathogenesis of many diseases.
Sydney Brenner (b 1927), Berkeley, CA, USA, established C. elegans as a novel experimental model organism. This provided a unique opportunity to link genetic analysis to cell division, differentiation and organ development – and to follow these processes under the microscope. Brenner's discoveries, carried out in Cambridge, UK, laid the foundation for this year's Prize.
John Sulston (b 1942), Cambridge, England, mapped a cell lineage where every cell division and differentiation could be followed in the development of a tissue in C. elegans. He showed that specific cells undergo programmed cell death as an integral part of the normal differentiation process, and he identified the first mutation of a gene participating in the cell death process.
Robert Horvitz (b 1947), Cambridge, MA, USA, has discovered and characterized key genes controlling cell death in C. elegans. He has shown how these genes interact with each other in the cell death process and that corresponding genes exist in humans.
All cells in our body are descendents from
the fertilized egg cell. Their relationship can be referred to as
a cellular pedigree or cell lineage. Cells differentiate and
specialize to form various tissues and organs, for example
muscle, blood, heart and the nervous system. The human body
consists of several hundreds of cell types, and the cooperation
between specialized cells makes the body function as an
integrated unit. To maintain the appropriate number of cells in
the tissues, a fine-tuned balance between cell division and cell
death is required. Cells have to differentiate in a correct
manner and at the right time during development in order to
generate the correct cell type.
It is of considerable biological and medical importance to
understand how these complicated processes are controlled. In
unicellular model organisms, e.g. bacteria and yeast, organ
development and the interplay between different cells cannot be
studied. Mammals, on the other hand, are too complex for these
basic studies, as they are composed of an enormous number of
cells. The nematode C. elegans, being multi-cellular,
yet relatively simple, was therefore chosen as the most
appropriate model system, which has then led to characterization
of these processes also in humans.
Normal life requires cell division to generate new cells but
also the presence of cell death, so that a balance is maintained
in our organs. In an adult human being, more than a thousand
billion cells are created every day. At the same time, an equal
number of cells die through a controlled "suicide process",
referred to as programmed cell death.
Developmental biologists first described programmed cell death.
They noted that cell death was necessary for embryonic
development, for example when tadpoles undergo metamorphosis to
become adult frogs. In the human foetus, the interdigital
mesoderm initially formed between fingers and toes is removed by
programmed cell death. The vast excess of neuronal cells present
during the early stages of brain development is also eliminated
by the same mechanism.
The seminal breakthrough in our understanding of programmed cell
death was made by this year's Nobel Laureates. They discovered
that specific genes control the cellular death program in the
nematode C. elegans. Detailed studies in this simple
model organism demonstrated that 131 of totally 1090 cells die
reproducibly during development, and that this natural cell death
is controlled by a unique set of genes.
Sydney Brenner realized, in the early 1960s,
that fundamental questions regarding cell differentiation and
organ development were hard to tackle in higher animals.
Therefore, a genetically amenable and multicellular model
organism simpler than mammals, was required. The ideal solution
proved to be the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. This
worm, approximately 1 mm long, has a short generation time and is
transparent, which made it possible to follow cell division
directly under the microscope.
Brenner provided the basis in a publication from 1974, in which
he broke new ground by demonstrating that specific gene mutations
could be induced in the genome of C. elegans by the
chemical compound EMS (ethyl methane sulphonate). Different
mutations could be linked to specific genes and to specific
effects on organ development. This combination of genetic
analysis and visualization of cell divisions observed under the
microscope initiated the discoveries that are awarded by this
year's Nobel Prize.
John Sulston extended
Brenner's work with C. elegans and developed techniques
to study all cell divisions in the nematode, from the fertilized
egg to the 959 cells in the adult organism. In a publication from
1976, Sulston described the cell lineage for a part of the
developing nervous system. He showed that the cell lineage is
invariant, i.e. every nematode underwent exactly the same program
of cell division and differentiation.
As a result of these findings Sulston made the seminal discovery
that specific cells in the cell lineage always die through
programmed cell death and that this could be monitored in the
living organism. He described the visible steps in the cellular
death process and demonstrated the first mutations of genes
participating in programmed cell death, including the
nuc-1 gene. Sulston also showed that the protein encoded
by the nuc-1 gene is required for degradation of the DNA
of the dead cell.
Robert Horvitz continued
Brenner's and Sulston's work on the genetics and cell lineage of
C. elegans. In a series of elegant experiments that
started during the 1970s, Horvitz used C. elegans to
investigate whether there was a genetic program controlling cell
death. In a pioneering publication from 1986, he identified the
first two bona fide "death genes", ced-3 and
ced-4. He showed that functional ced-3 and
ced-4 genes were a prerequisite for cell death to be
executed.
Later, Horvitz showed that another gene, ced-9, protects
against cell death by interacting with ced-4 and
ced-3. He also identified a number of genes that direct
how the dead cell is eliminated. Horvitz showed that the human
genome contains a ced-3-like gene. We now know that most
genes that are involved in controlling cell death in C.
elegans, have counterparts in humans.
The development of C. elegans as a novel experimental model system, the characterization of its invariant cell lineage, and the possibility to link this to genetic analysis have proven valuable for many research disciplines. For example, this is true for developmental biology and for analysis of the functions of various signaling pathways in a multicellular organism. The characterization of genes controlling programmed cell death in C. elegans soon made it possible to identify related genes with similar functions in humans. It is now clear that one of the signaling pathways in humans leading to cell death is evolutionarily well conserved. In this pathway ced-3-, ced-4- and ced-9-like molecules participate. Understanding perturbations in this and other signaling pathways controlling cell death are of prime importance for medicine.
Knowledge of programmed cell death has
helped us to understand the mechanisms by which some viruses and
bacteria invade our cells. We also know that in AIDS,
neurodegenerative diseases, stroke and myocardial infarction,
cells are lost as a result of excessive cell death. Other
diseases, like autoimmune conditions and cancer, are
characterized by a reduction in cell death, leading to the
survival of cells normally destined to die.
Research on programmed cell death is intense, including in the
field of cancer. Many treatment strategies are based on
stimulation of the cellular "suicide program". This is, for the
future, a most interesting and challenging task to further
explore in order to reach a more refined manner to induce cell
death in cancer cells.
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| Using the nematode C. elegans this year's Nobel Laureates have demonstrated how organ development and programmed cell death are genetically regulated. They have identified key genes regulating programmed cell death and demonstrated that corresponding genes exist also in higher animals, including man. The figure schematically illustrates the cell lineage (top left) and the programmed cell death (below) in C. elegans. The fertilized egg cell undergoes a series of cell divisions leading to cell differentiation and cell specialization, eventually producing the adult organism (top right). In C. elegans, all cell divisions and differentiations are invariant, i.e. identical from individual to individual, which made it possible to construct a cell lineage for all cell divisions. During development, 1090 cells are generated, but precisely 131 of these cells are eliminated by programmed cell death. This results in an adult nematode (the hermaphrodite), composed of 959 somatic cells. |