CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Sense of smell study wins Nobel Prize in medicine

Last Updated: Tuesday, October 12, 2004 | 10:31 AM ET

Two researchers from the U.S. who described the genes that give us our sense of smell have won the 2004 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

Richard Axel, 58, of Columbia University in New York, and Linda Buck, 57, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle will be awarded the $1.3-million US prize.

The pair found a family of 1,000 genes and receptors for the sense of smell, which the jury said clarified the olfactory system from the molecular to cellular level.

Linda Buck (file photo)
Linda Buck (file photo)

"A good wine or a sun-ripe wild strawberry activates a whole array of odorant receptors, helping us to perceive the different odorant molecules," the Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden said in its citation.

The scent of a flower, for example, brings a mix of molecules into the nose, turning on odour receptors. Our brains interpret the pattern to recognize and form memories of about 10,000 different odours, the assembly said.

"A unique odour can trigger distinct memories from our childhood or from emotional moments – positive or negative – later in life," the jury said.

Richard Axel (file photo)
Richard Axel (file photo)

The research may not have any medical or scientific applications, but the studies could explain why scents often remind us of childhood.

Scientists needed the tools of DNA technology to find the microscopic cells and proteins behind our sense of smell.

The sense of smell is essential for newborn mammals to find their mother's teat and feed on milk.

In 1991, Axel and Buck published a study on the 1,000 odour receptors in mice. Humans have far fewer receptors for our more limited sense of smell.

Axel and Buck are both investigators with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The award is named for Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite, who left an endowment to fund the prize.

The Nobel Prize for physics will be announced on Tuesday, followed by chemistry on Wednesday, literature likely on Thursday, peace on Friday and economics next Monday.

The awards are always presented on Dec. 10, the anniversary of Nobel's death in 1896.

  • This story is now closed to commenting.
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Related

Health Headlines

Housing first for mentally ill homeless Video
More than 1,300 homeless people across Canada will be provided housing as part of a massive four-year project to study the link between mental health and homelessness.
Diabetes study targets high-risk ethnic groups
Some ethnic communities are at higher risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, but a new research project in Toronto hopes to prevent the risk from becoming reality.
Mistletoe kisses adapted for H1N1
It's more hygienic to exchange kisses on the cheek than to shake hands, so the swine flu pandemic should not make people afraid of kissing under the mistletoe this holiday season, Britain's authority on etiquette says.
Home daycares use TV as babysitter: U.S. study
Parents with kids in home-based daycare likely underestimate the time their youngsters spend watching TV there, a U.S. study says.
Identical triplets could be home for holidays Video
A New Brunswick couple is looking forward to bringing their identical triplets home to Memramcook just in time for Christmas.

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Attacks on Afghan schools, students rise: report
Afghanistan teachers, students, educational personnel and schools were the targets of more than 1,100 violent attacks over a 2½ year period, forcing the closure of hundreds of schools across the country, a new report has found.
Retail sales up 1% in September
Retail sales rose a full per cent to $34.9 billion in September, their seventh increase in nine months.
Child dies after fall at Pearson airport Video
A 15-month-old boy has died after falling approximately 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
N.L. crash chopper failed certification test: FAA
A test to certify the model of helicopter involved in a fatal crash off Newfoundland showed it would remain airborne for "around 10 minutes" — about one third of the time required — if oil leaked from its gearbox, aviation regulators say.
Iranian-Canadian journalist talks of prison ordeal Video
Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari says he was regularly beaten and threatened with execution while imprisoned in Iran for 118 days.