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UW Professor Wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Professor David Baker鈥檚 work designing new proteins could help solve a range of problems 鈥 from creating new vaccines to breaking down pollutants.

David Baker, professor of biochemistry at the University of Washington, talks to reporters on Wednesday morning. Baker won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. (Ian C Haydon/UW Medicine Institute for Protein Design)

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A University of Washington professor received the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work designing new proteins, the building blocks of life.

David Baker, professor of biochemistry at the University of Washington School of Medicine and director of the school鈥檚 Institute for Protein Design, received the prize for computational protein design, along with Demis Hassabis and John Jumper of Google DeepMind, whose work with artificial intelligence helps predict the shape of proteins.

Their work could help accelerate the creation of new medicines and vaccines, expand abilities to break down things like plastic and other pollutants, or open opportunities to build new materials altogether.

鈥淧roteins solve all of the problems that living things have to deal with,鈥 Baker told reporters on Wednesday. 鈥淪o if you can make new proteins, you can potentially solve a lot of current problems for which there aren鈥檛 proteins to deal with.鈥

Baker, 62, is the eighth University of Washington faculty member and the sixth School of Medicine faculty member to receive the Nobel Prize.

Designing new proteins was always a 鈥渃razy idea鈥 鈥 one scientists have been trying to crack for decades, Baker said.

His work eventually led him to create computer software that analyzes information about existing proteins in order to build new ones. That software, along with the use of Hassabis鈥 and Jumper鈥檚 artificial intelligence tools that predict protein structure, could help scientists more quickly and accurately understand and construct proteins.

鈥淒avid and his team really contributed and led the cracking of the code to protein structure, how amino acid chains fold together in a three-dimensional structure to be the building blocks of life,鈥 said Dr. Timothy Dellit, CEO of UW Medicine and dean of the UW School of Medicine.

Proteins from Baker鈥檚 lab have already contributed to the development of , , and a medication for celiac disease.

University of Washington President Ana Mari Cauce called Baker鈥檚 work 鈥渁 truly visionary approach to protein science.鈥

鈥淭his is as good as it gets,鈥 she told reporters Wednesday. 鈥淭his is about taking these great basic science ideas and pushing them out so that they make a difference in the world.鈥

Baker grew up in Seattle, and his parents were both faculty members at the university. He completed his undergraduate degree at Harvard University in 1984 and earned his doctorate in biochemistry at the University of California, Berkeley in 1989. He joined the faculty at UW鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry in 1993.

For Baker, his work is just beginning. Now that his lab has figured out how to design new proteins, Baker said they will continue to experiment more with how to use them. For example, he and his students are looking at ways to block snake venom in the body, improve the efficiency of photosynthesis, or remove toxic tissue from the bloodstream.

He praised the university as an 鈥渁bsolutely wonderful place to do science.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e been here for a long time and never thought for a nanosecond about leaving,鈥 Baker said.

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