Berliner Boersenzeitung - Svante Paabo, Swedish medicine Nobel-winner follows in father's footsteps

EUR -
AED 4.09891
AFN 77.000743
ALL 99.421038
AMD 432.709522
ANG 2.014168
AOA 1036.161206
ARS 1074.372779
AUD 1.63902
AWG 2.008713
AZN 1.892529
BAM 1.956723
BBD 2.256485
BDT 133.554215
BGN 1.9648
BHD 0.420506
BIF 3229.563839
BMD 1.115952
BND 1.443094
BOB 7.722713
BRL 6.054487
BSD 1.117637
BTN 93.468734
BWP 14.703291
BYN 3.657459
BYR 21872.650742
BZD 2.252673
CAD 1.513738
CDF 3203.896851
CHF 0.94626
CLF 0.037647
CLP 1038.794656
CNY 7.887576
CNH 7.893003
COP 4648.217271
CRC 578.908317
CUC 1.115952
CUP 29.572717
CVE 110.757872
CZK 25.101324
DJF 198.32694
DKK 7.460585
DOP 67.177415
DZD 147.687163
EGP 54.165053
ERN 16.739274
ETB 131.123383
FJD 2.454868
FKP 0.849863
GBP 0.840607
GEL 3.047018
GGP 0.849863
GHS 17.515096
GIP 0.849863
GMD 76.437869
GNF 9655.77257
GTQ 8.639154
GYD 233.744111
HKD 8.697659
HNL 27.8426
HRK 7.587367
HTG 147.280815
HUF 394.493357
IDR 16964.863137
ILS 4.184785
IMP 0.849863
INR 93.303427
IQD 1461.896555
IRR 46973.192466
ISK 152.330631
JEP 0.849863
JMD 175.58285
JOD 0.790877
JPY 159.429268
KES 143.957565
KGS 94.046768
KHR 4541.922966
KMF 492.525074
KPW 1004.355779
KRW 1483.138649
KWD 0.340298
KYD 0.931235
KZT 535.202589
LAK 24645.790031
LBP 99618.896173
LKR 340.193571
LRD 216.77315
LSL 19.533359
LTL 3.295115
LVL 0.675027
LYD 5.295174
MAD 10.819142
MDL 19.500017
MGA 5083.159551
MKD 61.600735
MMK 3624.567164
MNT 3792.00338
MOP 8.970728
MRU 44.319988
MUR 51.188974
MVR 17.141333
MWK 1937.291581
MXN 21.557065
MYR 4.702602
MZN 71.253242
NAD 19.531837
NGN 1830.518009
NIO 41.033592
NOK 11.722223
NPR 149.567915
NZD 1.789962
OMR 0.429598
PAB 1.117637
PEN 4.179206
PGK 4.368062
PHP 62.005593
PKR 310.34939
PLN 4.277191
PYG 8724.194741
QAR 4.062342
RON 4.97446
RSD 117.073885
RUB 102.864693
RWF 1497.607005
SAR 4.187662
SBD 9.27014
SCR 15.202634
SDG 671.245006
SEK 11.344251
SGD 1.442485
SHP 0.849863
SLE 25.496483
SLL 23400.940677
SOS 637.208205
SRD 33.314523
STD 23097.94437
SVC 9.778614
SYP 2803.861723
SZL 19.532173
THB 36.971243
TJS 11.878474
TMT 3.90583
TND 3.374631
TOP 2.622262
TRY 38.03529
TTD 7.595733
TWD 35.468847
TZS 3040.967693
UAH 46.312453
UGX 4149.995388
USD 1.115952
UYU 45.911664
UZS 14211.64293
VEF 4042593.182683
VES 41.017307
VND 27430.089553
VUV 132.488012
WST 3.121833
XAF 656.290198
XAG 0.036273
XAU 0.000431
XCD 3.015915
XDR 0.828298
XOF 655.623781
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.350564
ZAR 19.539748
ZMK 10044.903741
ZMW 29.084593
ZWL 359.33595
  • CMSD

    0.0300

    25.01

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    25.12

    +0.26%

  • RBGPF

    60.5000

    60.5

    +100%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    41.62

    -1.95%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    65.18

    +3.48%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    37.57

    -0.83%

  • BP

    0.3300

    32.76

    +1.01%

  • AZN

    0.3200

    78.9

    +0.41%

  • NGG

    -1.2200

    68.83

    -1.77%

  • SCS

    -0.8000

    13.31

    -6.01%

  • RELX

    0.7600

    48.13

    +1.58%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.93

    -0.29%

  • BCC

    7.6300

    144.69

    +5.27%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    10.06

    -1.69%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    35.19

    -1.19%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.4

    -0.3%

Svante Paabo, Swedish medicine Nobel-winner follows in father's footsteps
Svante Paabo, Swedish medicine Nobel-winner follows in father's footsteps / Photo: Kimberly White - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Svante Paabo, Swedish medicine Nobel-winner follows in father's footsteps

Swedish paleogeneticist Svante Paabo, who won the Nobel Medicine Prize on Monday for using DNA to reveal the link between humans and Neanderthals, drew early inspiration from his Nobel laureate father.

Text size:

However Paabo later learned that his father had been living a "double life", and his existence had been kept a secret from his father's other family.

Paabo, 67, was awarded the medicine Nobel for a long list of achievements including sequencing the Neanderthal genome for the first time and discovering the existence of a distant human relative called the Denisovans.

He was born in Stockholm in 1955 to Estonian chemist Karin Paabo and Sune Bergstrom, a biochemist who won the Nobel Medicine Prize in 1982. His father died in 2004.

In his 2014 memoir "Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes", Paabo wrote that he gained inspiration to study medicine at Sweden's Uppsala University from his father, who had previously been a medical doctor.

Later he learned that his father "had two families, one of which did not know about the other," he wrote.

"I had grown up as the secret extra-marital son of Sune Bergstrom," Paabo wrote, adding that he had "only occasionally" seen his father as an adult.

Paabo also followed in his father's footsteps by studying biochemistry, earning a PhD at Uppsala University for using DNA research to study a protein of adenovirus, common viruses which cause cold-like symptoms.

But Paabo had long been fascinated with mummies and "could not quite shake off my romantic fascination with ancient Egypt," he wrote in his memoir.

- An impossible task -

The crossover of his medical research using DNA and preoccupation with mummies put him on the path that would become his life's work.

"Could it be possible to study ancient DNA sequences and thereby clarify how ancient Egyptians were related to one another and to people today?" he asked in his book.

"Such questions were breathtaking. Surely they must have already occurred to someone else."

Finding that they had not, Paabo sought his own answers.

It proved a difficult task, because there are only trace amounts of DNA left in ancients remains.

He first made international news in 1985, when he published research that found a DNA fragment in the mummy of a 2,400-year-old child.

Paabo then turned his focus toward Neanderthals when he was recruited by Germany's Munich University in 1995.

A year later, he managed to sequence some mitochondrial DNA from a 40,000-year-old piece of Neanderthal bone.

He then became the head of the genetics department at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

He accomplished the "seemingly impossible task" of publishing the first Neanderthal genome sequence in 2010, according to a statement from the Nobel Assembly.

The research surprised by the scientific world by showing that Neanderthal genomes are still present in one to four percent of humans from European or Asian descent.

"We find traces of their DNA everywhere," Paabo told AFP in 2018.

- 'Normal human beings' -

Also in 2010, Paabo and his team revealed the existence of Denisovans, an extinct human relative, just by sequencing the DNA from a 40,000-year-old finger bone.

Only a year before these breakthroughs were published, Paabo developed potentially life-threatening blood clots in his lungs.

While researching his illness, "to my amazement I stumbled upon references to my father's work in 1943", Paabo wrote in his memoir.

His father had "elucidated the chemical structure of herapain," the drug "which had perhaps saved my life," he wrote.

In an interview published by the Nobels on Monday, he said that having a Nobel-winning parent may have also given him confidence by showing that "such people are normal human beings and it's not such an amazing thing".

"You don't put your parents on a pedestal," he added.

He now identifies as bisexual and has two children with primatologist Linda Vigilant, who also works at the Max Planck Institute.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)