October 08, 2007 | Monday

'Magic wand' for mouse research takes the 2007 Nobel Prize for Medicine

Hot off the press:
Two British-born scientists, Sir Martin J Evans and Oliver Smithies, and an Italian-born colleague, Mario R Capecchi, share this year’s Nobel ’for their discoveries of principles for introducing specific gene modifications in mice by the use of embryonic stem cells‘.

In layman’s terms, they developed a way to make ‘designer mice’ that meant that the role of different genes in human development and disease could be tracked. The technique could be used (i) to discover the function of a gene, and (ii) to create of animal models of human disease such as cystic fibrosis, diabetes and heart disease.

This incredibly powerful technology – referred to as a ‘magic wand’ by Prof Ira Herskowitz in 2001 when she presented the Lasker prize to the trio – has had a revolutionary impact on medical research:

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