Nobels awarded for AIDS, cancer virus research
October 07 06:05:02 AM, Yahoo News

AP - Two French scientists who discovered the AIDS virus and a German who defied convention in showing a viral cause for cervical cancer shared the Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for breakthroughs that have led to lifesaving drugs and a vaccine.
Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier of France were cited for their discovery of HIV in 1983. They shared the award with Germany's Harald zur Hausen, who found that certain human papilloma viruses cause cervical cancer, the second most common cancer among women worldwide.
Zur Hausen discovered that two types of HPV promote cervical cancer, bucking a prevailing idea that blamed a different kind of virus. He made the viruses available to the scientific community. That led to the development of HPV vaccines to prevent cervical cancer. Vaccination is recommended for millions of young women and girls in the U.S.
Zur Hausen will get half of the $1.4 million prize, while the two French scientists split the other half.
The discovery the AIDS virus by Montagnier and Barre-Sinoussi was crucial to understanding the biology of AIDS and how to fight it, the Nobel Assembly said in its citation issued in Stockholm, Sweden. Since the scientists' work in the early 1980s, millions of people with HIV are still alive thanks to new drug treatments.
The announcement of the Nobel winners was notable for one scientist who was not named: U.S. researcher Dr. Robert Gallo, who almost 25 years ago also claimed credit for the discovery of HIV and who played a big role in research of the disease.
The dual claims led to a high-profile dispute between Gallo and Montagnier. They agreed publicly in 1987 to share the discovery credit equally, as part of a settlement of patent claims for an AIDS blood test. But Gallo later said he'd found that his lab's cultures had accidentally become contaminated with AIDS virus from Montagnier's lab.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, a prominent AIDS researcher and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md., said the French scientists clearly identified HIV first and deserved Monday's honor.
Gallo would have been "an obvious choice" to be included on the Nobel if the prize's rules had allowed for a fourth recipient, Fauci said. That's because of Gallo's role in showing HIV causes AIDS and in a technical advance that allowed HIV to be isolated, he said.
Gallo, director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland, told The Associated Press that it was "a disappointment" not to be included in the Nobel. But he said all three of the winners deserved the honor.
Reached in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where he is attending an international AIDS conference, Montagnier said he wished Gallo had been included in the prize.
"It is certain that he deserved this as much as us two," he said.
Montagnier said the prize "encourages us all to keep going until we reach the goal at the end of this effort."
He said he remains optimistic about conquering AIDS. Progress in developing a vaccine to prevent it has been frustrating.
Barre-Sinoussi said that when she and Montagnier isolated the virus 25 years ago they hoped they would be able to prevent the global AIDS epidemic that followed.
Last year, more than 33 million people worldwide were living with HIV and 2.1 million died of AIDS, according to global health estimates. Two-thirds of HIV infections are in sub-Saharan Africa.
"We naively thought that the discovery of the virus would allow us to quickly learn more about it, to develop diagnostic tests which has been done and to develop treatments, which has also been done to a large extent and, most of all, develop a vaccine that would prevent the global epidemic," Barre-Sinoussi told the AP by telephone from Cambodia.
The Nobel citation noted that the French researchers' work had "substantially decreased spread of the disease and dramatically increased life expectancy among treated patients."
Barre-Sinoussi, 61, is director of the Regulation of Retroviral Infections Union at the Institut Pasteur in France, while Montagnier, 76, is the director for the World Foundation for AIDS Research in Prevention, also in the French capital.
In honoring Zur Hausen, the Nobel Assembly said he "went against current dogma" when he found that some kinds of human papilloma virus, or HPV, caused cervical cancer. He was able to detect the DNA of HPV in tumors, and uncovered a family of HPV types, only some of which cause cancer.
The HPV virus, transmitted by sexual contact, causes genital warts that sometimes develop into cancer. The new cancer vaccines protect against the HPV strains that cause most cervical cancers.
When reached by the AP, Zur Hausen, 72, of the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg said: "I'm not prepared for this. We're drinking a little glass of bubbly right now."
____
Associated Press writers Karl Ritter, Matt Moore and Malin Rising in Stockholm and Benoit Hili in Abidjan contributed to this report.
____
On the Net:
Nobel Foundation: http://nobelprize.org/
Related articles
- Egypt calls meetings to discuss stopping piracy
Egypt, which makes $5 billion a year in Suez Canal passage fees, meets with other nations boarding the Red Sea to address ways to stop brazen hijackers.
… - Lawmakers fault Treasury, Fed on bailout
Reuters - Exasperated U.S. lawmakers criticized Federal Reserve and Treasury Department efforts to shore up the faltering economy on Thursday, telling officials that their financial rescue efforts have… - 3 airports opening new runways amid economic woes
AP - Alarm in the aviation industry over a projected 10 percent drop in domestic flights this winter didn't derail plans to open multimillion-dollar runways at three U.S. airports Thursday. - Citigroup shares tumble despite Alwaleed move
Reuters - Citigroup Inc lost more than one-quarter of its market value as new support from its largest individual investor failed to ease worries over whether it will have enough capital to withstand billions… - More job losses darken global economic outlook
AFP - News of fresh job cuts worldwide and a strong jump in US unemployment Thursday darkened the global economic outlook and sent financial markets into convulsions. - Browns GM Savage apologizes for e-mail expletive
AP - Cleveland Browns general manager Phil Savage has apologized to a fan whom he sent a profane e-mail to following Monday night's game against the Buffalo Bills. - Somali pirates demand 25 million dollars for Saudi oil tanker
AFP - Somali pirates who hijacked a Saudi oil super-tanker demanded a 25 million dollar ransom Thursday amid calls for tougher action to end threats to one of the world's key maritime routes. - Democrats demand Big 3 offer survival plan
Reuters - Democratic congressional leaders seeking to salvage a bailout of the Big Three automakers demanded car executives provide a business survival plan on Thursday in exchange for their support for… - States disagree greatly on Amber Alert criteria
AP - Authorities count hundreds of Amber Alert cases across the country as success stories when they start explaining why the media-friendly and politically popular bulletins are so important. - Report: Records search on Joe the Plumber improper
AP - An agency director improperly used state computers to find personal information on "Joe the Plumber," a government watchdog said in a report released Thursday. There was no legitimate business purpose… - Janet Napolitano emerges for Homeland Security job, Democrats say
President-elect Barack Obama is likely to choose Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano to be secretary of homeland security, top Obama advisers and several Democrats said today as the shape of Obama's Cabinet… - Bail denied Pa. woman accused of killing FBI agent
AP - A judge denied bail on Thursday for a woman accused of killing an FBI agent during a drug raid that led to her husband's arrest on cocaine-dealing charges. - Astronauts venture out for spacewalk No. 2
AP - Astronauts ventured back outside the international space station and performed more repair work on a jammed joint Thursday, keeping a tight grip on all their tools so nothing would get away this time. - Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac halt some foreclosures
Reuters - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two biggest home loan finance companies, on Thursday said they would suspend foreclosures of occupied homes until early 2009, one of the biggest moves to date… - Rep. Waxman to head House Energy and Commerce panel
House Democrats vote to oust John Dingell of Michigan, a key ally of the auto industry, as the chairman of the committee that handles environmental legislation.
… - Huge fare hike proposed for NYC transit system
AP - The cost of public transit in New York City would skyrocket next year — even as bus and subway service is reduced — under a plan unveiled Thursday by the nation's largest such system. - Jobs data miserable, regional factories slump
Reuters - The number of American workers on the unemployment rolls surged to the highest in a quarter century and a regional manufacturing gauge slumped as U.S. economic misery intensified. - Man convicted of killing Mo. 3-year-old gets life
AP - A man convicted of killing and beheading his then-girlfriend's 3-year-old daughter and dumping her body in the woods was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without the possibility of parole. - Scientists say Copernicus' remains, grave found
AP - Researchers said Thursday they have identified the remains of Nicolaus Copernicus by comparing DNA from a skeleton and hair retrieved from one of the 16th-century astronomer's books. The findings… - Activists say tobacco settlement is being wasted
AP - In 2006, Alaska desperately needed cash to complete a museum featuring a mummified bison and other natural wonders of the frozen north. So the state dipped into its share of the landmark 1998 tobacco… - Al Qaeda's No. 2 leader uses racial epithet against Barack Obama
In a video, Ayman Zawahiri says the president-elect is 'the direct opposite of honorable black Americans' and says Obama, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice are 'house Negroes.'
… - Britney Spears craves freedom amid career upswing
AP - Britney Spears is craving more freedom — and less of the "control" that's stabilized her personal life and reinvigorated her career over the last several months. - Calif. commuter train in crash; minor injuries
AP - A commuter train collided with a freight train Thursday in Southern California, producing no serious injuries but bringing back memories of a deadly commuter-train wreck in the region just two months… - Staffers weep as Ted Stevens gives last Senate speech
AP - "Uncle Ted" Stevens, an old-style Senate giant and the chamber's longest-serving Republican, delivered his swan song address and yielded the floor for the final time Thursday. He was saluted by his…