University of Washington’s David Baker Wins Nobel Prize for Designing Proteins

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University of Washington biochemist David Baker has won a share of this year’s Nobel Prize in chemistry for more than two decades of discoveries about the molecular structure of proteins — discoveries that have led to new medical therapies, new materials and new startups.

“I’m very, very excited about the future,” Baker, who is the director of the UW Medicine Institute for Protein Design, said today during a Seattle news briefing. “I think protein design has huge potential to make the world a better place, and I really do think we’re just at the very, very beginning.”

Baker shares the prize with Demis Hassabis and John Jumper of Google DeepMind, who have also pioneered computational techniques for predicting protein structure. They will be awarded their medals at a ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden, on Dec. 10.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said Baker “has succeeded with the almost impossible feat of building entirely new kinds of proteins.”

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