Zürcher Nachrichten - Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines

EUR -
AED 4.241003
AFN 73.32143
ALL 96.264457
AMD 435.49084
ANG 2.066822
AOA 1058.764604
ARS 1597.949484
AUD 1.676973
AWG 2.078272
AZN 1.967396
BAM 1.962489
BBD 2.325728
BDT 141.683564
BGN 1.973561
BHD 0.435685
BIF 3427.417086
BMD 1.154596
BND 1.486969
BOB 8.008298
BRL 6.067751
BSD 1.154731
BTN 109.448969
BWP 15.919471
BYN 3.437216
BYR 22630.074075
BZD 2.322286
CAD 1.604831
CDF 2635.36902
CHF 0.921949
CLF 0.027055
CLP 1068.301597
CNY 7.980392
CNH 7.989998
COP 4249.2467
CRC 536.225485
CUC 1.154596
CUP 30.596784
CVE 110.98555
CZK 24.603629
DJF 205.195187
DKK 7.496448
DOP 68.95827
DZD 153.879614
EGP 60.780401
ERN 17.318934
ETB 180.838585
FJD 2.609838
FKP 0.868614
GBP 0.870276
GEL 3.094767
GGP 0.868614
GHS 12.666364
GIP 0.868614
GMD 84.867224
GNF 10137.349919
GTQ 8.837161
GYD 241.720221
HKD 9.035924
HNL 30.608778
HRK 7.557064
HTG 151.366612
HUF 390.276858
IDR 19617.503194
ILS 3.622683
IMP 0.868614
INR 109.529794
IQD 1512.520257
IRR 1516272.693223
ISK 144.047794
JEP 0.868614
JMD 181.759555
JOD 0.818654
JPY 185.080568
KES 149.986359
KGS 100.96983
KHR 4632.238016
KMF 494.167328
KPW 1039.005581
KRW 1741.130593
KWD 0.355512
KYD 0.962293
KZT 558.235579
LAK 25285.644395
LBP 103394.037822
LKR 363.741444
LRD 212.012665
LSL 19.813301
LTL 3.409221
LVL 0.698404
LYD 7.360592
MAD 10.789123
MDL 20.282399
MGA 4820.437097
MKD 61.637435
MMK 2427.526343
MNT 4123.646826
MOP 9.31702
MRU 46.322813
MUR 54.000874
MVR 17.838939
MWK 2005.532983
MXN 20.922547
MYR 4.530678
MZN 73.836825
NAD 19.813296
NGN 1597.337286
NIO 42.397186
NOK 11.20288
NPR 175.114145
NZD 2.009741
OMR 0.444613
PAB 1.154721
PEN 3.994328
PGK 4.975197
PHP 69.911197
PKR 322.367369
PLN 4.298271
PYG 7549.734427
QAR 4.218027
RON 5.111746
RSD 117.558661
RUB 94.006614
RWF 1686.864195
SAR 4.332448
SBD 9.285301
SCR 16.659944
SDG 693.912357
SEK 10.938258
SGD 1.492666
SHP 0.866246
SLE 28.345751
SLL 24211.30527
SOS 659.855623
SRD 43.413994
STD 23897.798134
STN 24.650616
SVC 10.103439
SYP 129.111885
SZL 19.813287
THB 37.940438
TJS 11.033396
TMT 4.041085
TND 3.37839
TOP 2.779989
TRY 51.302613
TTD 7.845709
TWD 36.998328
TZS 2974.800639
UAH 50.614226
UGX 4301.662877
USD 1.154596
UYU 46.739318
UZS 14091.83988
VES 540.268027
VND 30409.162038
VUV 138.27014
WST 3.204592
XAF 658.200578
XAG 0.0165
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.120353
XCG 2.081103
XDR 0.816058
XOF 655.810693
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.490657
ZAR 19.766671
ZMK 10392.750198
ZMW 21.737094
ZWL 371.779317
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.66

    -0.4%

  • GSK

    -0.1000

    53.84

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    0.8500

    86.64

    +0.98%

  • VOD

    -0.1400

    14.49

    -0.97%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    81.92

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    25.25

    -0.87%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.77

    -0.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    14.65

    -4.03%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    31.97

    -0.31%

  • AZN

    5.0200

    188.42

    +2.66%

  • JRI

    -0.2700

    11.8

    -2.29%

  • BCC

    0.1400

    74.43

    +0.19%

  • BTI

    0.3749

    57.8

    +0.65%

  • BP

    0.5100

    46.68

    +1.09%

Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines
Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines / Photo: Handout - FAMILY HANDOUT/AFP

Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines

Hungarian-born scientist Katalin Kariko's obsession with researching a substance called mRNA to fight disease once cost her a faculty position at a prestigious US university, which dismissed the idea as a dead end.

Text size:

Now, her pioneering work -- which paved the way for the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines -- has won her the Nobel Prize in Medicine.

Kariko, 68, spent much of the 1990s writing grant applications to fund her research into "messenger ribonucleic acid" -- genetic molecules that tell cells what proteins to make, essential to keeping our bodies alive and healthy.

She believed mRNA held the key to treating diseases where having more of the right kind of protein can help -- like repairing the brain after a stroke.

But the University of Pennsylvania, where Kariko was on track for a professorship, decided to pull the plug after the grant rejections piled up.

"I was up for promotion, and then they just demoted me and expected that I would walk out the door," she told AFP in an interview from her home in Philadelphia in December 2020.

Kariko didn't yet have a green card and needed a job to renew her visa. She also knew she wouldn't be able to put her daughter through college without the hefty staff discount.

She decided to persist as a lower-rung researcher, scraping by on a meagre salary.

It was a low point in her life and career, but "I just thought...you know, the (lab) bench is here, I just have to do better experiments," she said.

The determination runs in the family -- her daughter Susan Francia did go to UPenn, where she earned a master's degree, and won gold medals with the US Olympic rowing team in 2008 and 2012.

- Twin breakthroughs -

By the late 1980s, much of the scientific community was focused on using DNA to deliver gene therapy, but Kariko believed that mRNA was also promising since most diseases are not hereditary and don't need solutions that permanently alter our genetics.

First though, she had to overcome a major problem: in animal experiments, synthetic mRNA was causing a massive inflammatory response as the immune system sensed an invader and rushed to fight it.

Kariko, together with her main collaborator and co-winner Drew Weissman, discovered that one of the four building blocks of the synthetic mRNA was at fault -- and they could overcome the problem by swapping it out with a modified version.

They published a paper on the breakthrough in 2005. Then, in 2015, they found a new way to deliver mRNA into mice, using a fatty coating called "lipid nanoparticles" that prevent the mRNA from degrading, and help place it inside the right part of cells.

Both these innovations were key to the Covid-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech, where Kariko is now a senior vice president, as well as the shots produced by Moderna.

Both work by giving human cells the instructions to make a surface protein of the coronavirus, which simulates an infection and trains the immune system for when it encounters the real virus.

- New treatments -

Though she does not want to make too much of it, as a foreign-born woman in a male-dominated field, Kariko occasionally felt underestimated -- saying people would approach after lectures and ask "Who's your supervisor?"

"They were always thinking, 'That woman with the accent, there must be somebody behind her who is smarter or something,'" she said.

Yet the Nobel is just the latest accolade for Kariko, who has won the Breakthrough Prize, the L'Oreal-UNESCO prize for women in science awards, among many others.

It is a far cry from the time when her late mother would call every year after prize announcements to ask why she hadn't been chosen.

"I never in my life get (federal) grants, I am nobody, not even faculty," she would reply with a laugh.

To which her mother would reply: "But you work so hard!"

B.Brunner--NZN