‘Was forced to retire…’: Nobel Prize winner Katalin Kariko shares her journey

In the first interview after the announcement of her Nobel prize win, Katalin Kariko talked about how she was “kicked out” of the University of Pennsylvania ten years ago, her advice to women scientists, and the mantra she follows in life.

Katalin Kariko was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 2023 along with Drew Weissman. (Photo: @kkariko on X)

The winner of this year’s Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Katalin Kariko, said she was “kicked out” of the University of Pennsylvania ten years ago and was forced to retire. She joined the university in 1989 as an adjunct professor until her departure in 2013. Soon afterwards, she joined BioNTech, the German biotechnology company which partnered with Pfizer in 2020 to develop mRNA vaccines against Covid-19.

Kariko’s Nobel prize, which she shared with Drew Weissman, was for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines against Covid-19.

In her first reaction to her Nobel win, Kariko told Adam Smith, the Chief Scientific Officer at Nobel Prize Outreach, that she thought “somebody was joking”.

Speaking about her journey on mRNA research, Katalin Kariko, who is now 68, said “I have conducted all her experiments with my own hands” at the age of 58. “I was 58 years old and I was still culturing plasmids and feeding cells”. She added that for nine years, she frequently commuted to Germany, where the company was located, from the US.

Kariko also paid tribute to her mother who passed away in 2018, and said, “My mother always listened to the announcement of the Nobel Prize and she would tell me, the next time they announce it, maybe you will get it. You know, I was laughing. I was not even a professor and didn’t have a team. I told my mom, don’t listen to it. And she said, ‘But you work so hard’ and I told her that all scientists work very hard”.

The Nobel prize winner also had some advice for other women scientists. She said they can have it all without choosing between their research and their families. “As a woman and a mother, I try to tell fellow female scientists that you don’t have to choose between having a family. You can have it, you don’t have to just assist your child. Your child will watch you and then they will do it because that’s what counts — the example that you present,” said Katalin Kariko.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/science/story/nobel-prize-winner-katalin-kariko-kicked-out-pennsylvania-univsersity-forced-to-retire-2443461-2023-10-02

Rapinoe retires from soccer with no regrets on activism

Soccer Football – FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia and New Zealand 2023 – Round of 16 – Sweden v United States – Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Melbourne, Australia – August 6, 2023 Megan Rapinoe of the U.S. during the match REUTERS/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/File Photo

Megan Rapinoe will bid farewell to international football with no regrets about her time on and off the pitch, she told a news conference on Saturday ahead of her last game on Sunday, highlighting her support of social causes throughout her career.

The striker, who earned recognition not only for being a two-time world champion but also for her activism, gained fame for her advocacy of LGBT+ rights, solidarity with NFL player Colin Kaepernick and famously confronting former U.S. President Donald Trump.

“The off-field stuff is what is most meaningful (to me) and I think what I’m most proud of leaving this team and leaving the game,” she said.

“Being so vocal about racial justice or gay rights, I feel like the team really stepped into it and took upon itself to be so much more of what we were on the field and really focus on that.”

“We’ve been a very special generation of players, but I think it says a lot about us that everything we’ve accomplished on the field pales in comparison to what we’ve done off the field.”

Although the 38-year-old player will say goodbye to the U.S. national team on Sunday when they face South Africa in a friendly, she shows no signs of retiring from public life after a career spent championing social causes.

“I’m very excited to continue to be a part of the growth of women’s sport, not just football. I think we are at a very special time. I want to use my platform and my leverage, but now I’ll have more time to do that.”

Source: https://www.reuters.com/sports/soccer/rapinoe-retires-soccer-with-no-regrets-activism-2023-09-23/

Exit mobile version