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2010 Chemistry Nobel Prize Awarded To Richard Heck, Ei-ichi Negishi And Akira Suzuki For Key Chemical Tool

MALCOLM RITTER and KARL RITTER   10/ 6/10 08:51 PM ET   AP

2010 Chemistry Nobel Prize

NEW YORK — A method for building complex molecules has paid off by helping to fight cancer, protect crops and make electronic devices – and now it has earned its developers a Nobel Prize.

Three men – two Japanese scientists and an American researcher – designed the technique to bind together carbon atoms, a key step in assembling the skeletons of organic compounds used in medicine, agriculture and electronics.

Their work in the 1960s and 1970s provided "one of the most sophisticated tools available to chemists today (and) vastly improved the possibilities for chemists to create sophisticated chemicals," the Nobel committee said.

The winners are Richard Heck, 79, a professor emeritus at the University of Delaware, now living in the Philippines; Ei-ichi Negishi, 75, a chemistry professor at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., and Akira Suzuki, 80, a retired professor from Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan.

Carbon atoms are normally shy about pairing up. The winning approach was to use atoms of the metal palladium kind of like a singles bar, a place where pairs of carbon atoms are jammed together and encouraged to bond. This idea, called palladium-catalyzed cross coupling, was easier to do than previous methods.

Heck published his initial work in 1968 and an improved method in 1972. In 1977, Negishi developed a variant of the palladium approach and two years later Suzuki developed another.

Altogether, their methods are now widely used in industry and research.

"I don't think anybody thinks about making a complicated organic compound without considering one of these three reactions," said Keith Woerpel, a chemistry professor at New York University.

By one estimate, they're the basis for at least 25 percent of all chemical reactions in the pharmaceutical industry, said prize committee member Claes Gustafsson.

That includes the production of the common painkiller naproxen, widely sold as Aleve and other brands, new antibiotics, an asthma drug and a synthetic version of a substance from a marine sponge that might fight cancer. Heck's work was adapted to make the cancer drug Taxol, steroids and morphine, the Nobel committee said.

In agriculture, the palladium approach is used to make chemicals that protect crops from fungi and other pests. And the electronics industry uses it for coating electronic circuits and as a tool for developing future computer screens that are thinner, said prize committee member Jan-Erling Backvall.

Jeremy Berg, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in Bethesda, Md., said the three winners did "very fundamental and important work."

Bonds between carbon atoms "are really the lifeblood of the ability to make organic compounds," Berg said. "Making the carbon-carbon bond is really sort of the framework. It's like the framing of a house. You can add on other pieces later on, but the carbon-carbon formation is really a key part of it."

The palladium approach makes carbon atoms bond "very easily, very cleanly," said Joseph Francisco, president of the American Chemical Society and a colleague of Negishi's in Purdue's chemistry department.

Though the prize was given for breakthroughs made 30 to 40 years ago, that's not uncommon for Nobel Prizes, especially if the real-world uses increase over time.

"This is one of those cases," said Gustafsson, of the chemistry prize committee.

Heck was the only American among the Nobel science winners this year. In recent years, there have been at least two U.S. scientists among the medicine, physics and chemistry laureates; there were none in 1991.

Heck, who has retired from active research, said the award would probably not spur any major change in his settled life in the Philippines, where he lives with his Filipino wife and tends to an orchid garden and pet birds.

"It's a nice thing to have, but I don't think this is going to change my life. I'm too old," Heck told The Associated Press in an interview in his suburban Manila home.

Negishi told reporters in Stockholm by telephone from Indiana that he started dreaming about winning the prize half a century ago.

"The Nobel Prize became a realistic dream of mine when I was in my 20s," he said, adding he would use his third of the $1.5 million (10 million kronor) award to continue doing research.

"I may have accomplished maybe half of my goals, and I definitely would like to work for at least a couple more years," Negishi said.

Suzuki, in a televised news conference from Hokkaido University, said he hoped the prize would inspire Japanese youngsters to explore chemistry.

"To my disappointment, not many young people seem to be interested in science, especially chemistry," Suzuki said.

The literature prize will be announced on Thursday, followed by the peace prize on Friday and economics on Monday, Oct. 11.

The awards were established by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel – the inventor of dynamite – and are always handed out on Dec. 10, the anniversary of his death in 1896.

___

Karl Ritter reported from Stockholm. Associated Press Writers Louise Nordstrom and Malin Rising in Stockholm, Mari Yamaguchi and Jay Alabaster in Tokyo and Jim Gomez in Manila contributed to this report.

___

Online:

http://www.nobelprize.org

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
02:57 PM on 10/09/2010
Sure would like to see more articles like this in the Tech section. IMO, here's only so much you can say (or that I can read) about cellphones and social networking.
05:01 AM on 10/07/2010
As Richard Heck appears to have been living/residing in a non-U.S. country, perhaps, it would be more appropriate that he represent the other country ;-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
11:51 PM on 10/06/2010
Pd is a great organic chemistry catalyst, I used it all the time for Hydrogenation reactions, these guys took it to the next step, getting carbons to chain up....very tough!! NICE JOB!...they deserve the nod.
CONGRATS!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:22 PM on 10/06/2010
Bbbbbut this isn't about Facebook or Aps. Why is it on "Tech"?
(sarcasm)
Congrats to the winners.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tomteboda
06:32 PM on 10/06/2010
Bravo for these chemists! Heck, Negishi and Suzuki are "household names" among chemists, and the importance of palladium catalysts in organic synthesis have been long recognized.
12:46 PM on 10/06/2010
Disappointed that not one article on the front page is about the Nobel prize, but there are tons about celebrities and Christine O'Donelle oral sex comments. Sad day indeed.
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
08:03 PM on 10/06/2010
I agree and think Huffpo would be wise to step up the intelligence/sensitivity factor rather than the tabloid factor if they want to groom a new decade of intelligence increase rather than decrease like the rest of the human zoo media. Until then I will play the fool and make asinine comments along with my more sensitive ones. When a journal is appealing to bottom feeders it sure is fun to create mayhem. Perhaps Huffpo thinks that too much seriousness is not enough fun, not sexy enough, not entertaining enough, not current enough, not saavy enough.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
11:56 PM on 10/06/2010
IT just reflects the world we live in. E! TV vs advanced organic synthesis......the i-phone generation has spoken. thats why we are where we are today.....
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
03:02 AM on 10/07/2010
I'm not sure why I keep participating as a commenter here. Does it have a narcotic effect? Am I too cut off from others and need my fix through the pixilated perspective? I'll continue here for some time longer as it helps me stay sharp in certain regards, but the quality of intelligence coming from many of these writers and editors is annoying. It's strange in that there's pretense to be informative but there seems to be a critical vacuum in the general spirit herewithin. It makes me feel genuinely sad hoping they would take themselves seriously enough to step up the depth of investigation. When do they expect us to be more intensely motivated if they won't set the right example? They seem to have a lot of room for showing women's body parts in between the flompy reportage.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NoahVail
...a curmudgeon from So. Arizona
09:27 AM on 10/06/2010
I hope these 3 guys all make it to the ceremony safely.

Too bad they didn't get the awards 30 years ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ArjenBoatsma
No such thing as too much coffee.
09:43 AM on 10/06/2010
30 years ago the full impact of their discoveries / developments wasn't clear yet.
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Kache
Citizens, Unite!
03:32 PM on 10/07/2010
It still isn't. Their work allows creation of single atom thick graphenes, an opportunity for replacing semi-conductors that is just now getting serious research funding, and serious results. Think terahertz processors.