U of Washington biochemist wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry
College of Washington biochemist David Baker has been awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in “computational protein design.”
He’ll obtain half of the $1.1 million prize; the opposite half will likely be cut up between Demis Hassabis and John Jumper of Google DeepMind, who gained for “protein construction prediction.”
In keeping with the Nobel announcement, Baker succeeded in utilizing amino acids to design a totally new sort of protein in 2003, which has led to the creation of an entire vary of recent proteins that can be utilized as prescription drugs, vaccines and extra.
The Nobel committee praised him for creating “computerized strategies for reaching what many individuals believed was unimaginable: creating proteins that didn’t beforehand exist and which, in lots of instances, have fully new capabilities.”
When Baker bought the decision Wednesday morning, he was asleep. “My spouse promptly began screaming, so I had a bit laborious time listening to,” he stated. “However then they bought the information throughout.”
He stated he was honored to share the prize with Hassabis and Jumper.
“There’s at all times been two sides to the protein folding drawback going from sequence to construction after which again from construction to sequence,” Baker stated. “And I feel it’s neat that there’s a Noble Prize for them collectively.”