-
US households become increasingly strained in diverging economy
-
Four dead men: the cold case that engulfed a Colombian cycling star
-
Super Bowl stars stake claims for Olympic flag football
-
On a roll, Brazilian cinema seizes its moment
-
Rising euro, falling inflation in focus at ECB meeting
-
AI to track icebergs adrift at sea in boon for science
-
Indigenous Brazilians protest Amazon river dredging for grain exports
-
Google's annual revenue tops $400 bn for first time, AI investments rise
-
Last US-Russia nuclear treaty ends in 'grave moment' for world
-
Man City brush aside Newcastle to reach League Cup final
-
Guardiola wants permission for Guehi to play in League Cup final
-
Boxer Khelif reveals 'hormone treatments' before Paris Olympics
-
'Bad Boy,' 'Little Pablo' and Mordisco: the men on a US-Colombia hitlist
-
BHP damages trial over Brazil mine disaster to open in 2027
-
Dallas deals Davis to Wizards in blockbuster NBA trade: report
-
Iran-US talks back on, as Trump warns supreme leader
-
Lens cruise into French Cup quarters, Endrick sends Lyon through
-
No.1 Scheffler excited for Koepka return from LIV Golf
-
Curling quietly kicks off sports programme at 2026 Winter Olympics
-
Undav pokes Stuttgart past Kiel into German Cup semis
-
Germany goalkeeper Ter Stegen to undergo surgery
-
Bezos-led Washington Post announces 'painful' job cuts
-
Iran says US talks are on, as Trump warns supreme leader
-
Gaza health officials say strikes kill 24 after Israel says officer wounded
-
Empress's crown dropped in Louvre heist to be fully restored: museum
-
UK PM says Mandelson 'lied' about Epstein relations
-
Shai to miss NBA All-Star Game with abdominal strain
-
Trump suggests 'softer touch' needed on immigration
-
From 'flop' to Super Bowl favorite: Sam Darnold's second act
-
Man sentenced to life in prison for plotting to kill Trump in 2024
-
Native Americans on high alert over Minneapolis crackdown
-
Dallas deals Davis to Wizards in blockbuster NBA deal: report
-
Russia 'no longer bound' by nuclear arms limits as treaty with US ends
-
Panama hits back after China warns of 'heavy price' in ports row
-
Strike kills guerrillas as US, Colombia agree to target narco bosses
-
Wildfire smoke kills more than 24,000 Americans a year: study
-
Telegram founder slams Spain PM over under-16s social media ban
-
Curling kicks off sports programme at 2026 Winter Olympics
-
Preventative cholera vaccination resumes as global supply swells: WHO
-
Wales' Macleod ready for 'physical battle' against England in Six Nations
-
Xi calls for 'mutual respect' with Trump, hails ties with Putin
-
'All-time great': Maye's ambitions go beyond record Super Bowl bid
-
Shadow over Vonn as Shiffrin, Odermatt headline Olympic skiing
-
US seeks minerals trade zone in rare Trump move with allies
-
Ukraine says Abu Dhabi talks with Russia 'substantive and productive'
-
Brazil mine disaster victims in London to 'demand what is owed'
-
AI-fuelled tech stock selloff rolls on
-
Russia vows to act 'responsibly' as nuclear pact ends with US
-
White says time at Toulon has made him a better Scotland player
-
Washington Post announces 'painful' job cuts
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.
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.
D.AbuRida--SF-PST