STOCKHOLM, Sweden—Nobel laureates in medicine Elizabeth H. Blackburn, Carol W. Greider and Jack W. Szostak arrived in Stockholm on Sunday for the prize ceremonies and celebrations in the coming week.
The trio won the prestigious prize for the solving the mystery of how chromosomes that contains our genes are naturally protected from damage during cell division. A discovery which gives insight into how our body ages and furthers our knowledge about cancer and other diseases.
“For most people the importance is probably the potential for medical advances in the field of aging and cancer,” Jack W. Szostak told The Epoch Times.
Szostak said that science was his passion from a very early age, and he would encourage young people to follow his footsteps.
“You can think of questions about nature and think about how to answer them and one question leads to another, it’s always fun and interesting,” Szostak said.
The trio won the prestigious prize for the solving the mystery of how chromosomes that contains our genes are naturally protected from damage during cell division. A discovery which gives insight into how our body ages and furthers our knowledge about cancer and other diseases.
“For most people the importance is probably the potential for medical advances in the field of aging and cancer,” Jack W. Szostak told The Epoch Times.
Szostak said that science was his passion from a very early age, and he would encourage young people to follow his footsteps.
“You can think of questions about nature and think about how to answer them and one question leads to another, it’s always fun and interesting,” Szostak said.