The Fort Worth Press - Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines

USD -
AED 3.672502
AFN 66.163223
ALL 82.178011
AMD 380.793362
ANG 1.790403
AOA 917.000068
ARS 1450.742897
AUD 1.51373
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.697378
BAM 1.66612
BBD 2.009004
BDT 121.89647
BGN 1.66574
BHD 0.377044
BIF 2948.778015
BMD 1
BND 1.289026
BOB 6.892615
BRL 5.520604
BSD 0.997432
BTN 90.213099
BWP 13.173867
BYN 2.945358
BYR 19600
BZD 2.006108
CAD 1.37758
CDF 2265.000052
CHF 0.794959
CLF 0.023399
CLP 917.920626
CNY 7.04325
CNH 7.036175
COP 3865.5
CRC 496.969542
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.933289
CZK 20.770301
DJF 177.619334
DKK 6.36147
DOP 62.781377
DZD 129.434349
EGP 47.614102
ERN 15
ETB 155.065976
EUR 0.85142
FJD 2.28425
FKP 0.744905
GBP 0.748015
GEL 2.69498
GGP 0.744905
GHS 11.4911
GIP 0.744905
GMD 73.49767
GNF 8720.392873
GTQ 7.63972
GYD 208.695208
HKD 7.78065
HNL 26.279698
HRK 6.415199
HTG 130.648857
HUF 331.238027
IDR 16731.85
ILS 3.238465
IMP 0.744905
INR 90.17355
IQD 1306.658943
IRR 42109.999705
ISK 126.010043
JEP 0.744905
JMD 159.602697
JOD 0.708981
JPY 155.853969
KES 128.950252
KGS 87.45021
KHR 3995.195543
KMF 418.999825
KPW 900.011412
KRW 1477.920071
KWD 0.30687
KYD 0.831243
KZT 513.04833
LAK 21605.574533
LBP 89322.26491
LKR 308.916356
LRD 176.553522
LSL 16.705284
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.408398
MAD 9.140319
MDL 16.831784
MGA 4506.288786
MKD 52.402397
MMK 2100.219412
MNT 3548.424678
MOP 7.992265
MRU 39.658749
MUR 46.039983
MVR 15.45019
MWK 1729.597117
MXN 18.006703
MYR 4.083957
MZN 63.920298
NAD 16.705355
NGN 1453.250278
NIO 36.706235
NOK 10.203899
NPR 144.335596
NZD 1.735075
OMR 0.384501
PAB 0.997474
PEN 3.360253
PGK 4.241363
PHP 58.520495
PKR 279.486334
PLN 3.586635
PYG 6699.803648
QAR 3.636364
RON 4.3355
RSD 99.934875
RUB 80.501056
RWF 1452.319802
SAR 3.750782
SBD 8.130216
SCR 14.884838
SDG 601.504454
SEK 9.297645
SGD 1.291445
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.101579
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 569.036089
SRD 38.678025
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.870336
SVC 8.728097
SYP 11057.156336
SZL 16.70138
THB 31.430079
TJS 9.206851
TMT 3.5
TND 2.911152
TOP 2.40776
TRY 42.733036
TTD 6.766306
TWD 31.510801
TZS 2468.950996
UAH 42.336966
UGX 3555.775153
UYU 38.863072
UZS 12075.031306
VES 276.2312
VND 26332.5
VUV 121.327724
WST 2.791029
XAF 558.777254
XAG 0.015049
XAU 0.000231
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.797668
XDR 0.69494
XOF 558.777254
XPF 101.59601
YER 238.349874
ZAR 16.760803
ZMK 9001.193708
ZMW 22.866221
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.86

    +1.48%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    40.56

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    1.2000

    77.19

    +1.55%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.71

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    77.16

    +1.8%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.17

    -0.21%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.15

    -0.78%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.26

    -0.34%

  • BP

    0.7100

    34.47

    +2.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.28

    -0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.43

    -0.6%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.81

    +0.86%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    76.29

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    89.86

    -1.66%

Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines
Katalin Kariko, scientific maverick who paved way for mRNA vaccines / Photo: © 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!"

L.Holland--TFWP