An MIT Alumni Association Publication

MIT alumnus Victor Ambros ’75, PhD ’79 and Gary Ruvkun, who did his postdoctoral training at MIT, will share the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced this morning in Stockholm.

Ambros, a professor at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, and Ruvkun, a professor at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, were honored for their discovery of microRNA, a class of tiny RNA molecules that play a critical role in gene control.

“Their groundbreaking discovery revealed a completely new principle of gene regulation that turned out to be essential for multicellular organisms, including humans. It is now known that the human genome codes for over one thousand microRNAs. Their surprising discovery revealed an entirely new dimension to gene regulation. MicroRNAs are proving to be fundamentally important for how organisms develop and function,” the Nobel committee said in its announcement today.

During the late 1980s, Ambros and Ruvkun both worked as postdocs in the laboratory of H. Robert Horvitz, a David H. Koch Professor at MIT, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2002.

While in Horvitz’s lab, the pair began studying gene control in the roundworm C. elegans—an effort that laid the groundwork for their Nobel discoveries. They studied two mutant forms of the worm, known as lin-4 and lin-14, that showed defects in the timing of the activation of genetic programs that control development.

In the early 1990s, while Ambros was a faculty member at Harvard University, he made a surprising discovery. The lin-4 gene, instead of encoding a protein, produced a very short RNA molecule that appeared in inhibit the expression of lin-14.

At the same time, Ruvkun was continuing to study these C. elegans genes in his lab at MGH and Harvard. He showed that lin-4 did not inhibit lin-14 by preventing the lin-14 gene from being transcribed into messenger RNA; instead, it appeared to turn off the gene’s expression later on, by preventing production of the protein encoded by lin-14.

The two compared results and realized that the sequence of lin-4 was complementary to some short sequences of lin-14. Lin-4, they showed, was binding to messenger RNA encoding lin-14 and blocking it from being translated into protein—a mechanism for gene control that had never been seen before. Those results were published in two articles in the journal Cell in 1993.

In an interview with the Journal of Cell Biology, Ambros credited the contributions of his collaborators, including his wife, Rosalind “Candy” Lee ’76, and postdoc Rhonda Feinbaum, who both worked in his lab, cloned and characterized the lin-4 microRNA, and were co-authors on one of the 1993 Cell papers.

In 2000, Ruvkun published the discovery of another microRNA molecule, encoded by a gene called let-7, which is found throughout the animal kingdom. Since then, more than 1,000 microRNA genes have been found in humans.

“Ambros and Ruvkun’s seminal discovery in the small worm C. elegans was unexpected, and revealed a new dimension to gene regulation, essential for all complex life forms,” the Nobel citation declared.

Ambros, who was born in New Hampshire and grew up in Vermont, earned his PhD at MIT under the supervision of David Baltimore, then an MIT professor of biology, who received a Nobel Prize in 1973. Ambros was a longtime faculty member at Dartmouth College before joining the faculty at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School in 2008.

Ruvkun is a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley and earned his PhD at Harvard University before joining Horvitz’s lab at MIT.


This story was originally published by MIT News.

Photos: Victor Ambros, left, courtesy of UMass Chan Medical School; Gary Ruvkun, courtesy of the Harvard Gazette

Alumni Who Have Won the Nobel Prize

ALUMNUS/ALUMNA

YEAR

CATEGORY

Simon Johnson PhD ’892024Economic Sciences
Victor Ambros ’75, PhD ’79 2024Physiology or Medicine
Ben Bernanke PhD ’79 2022Economic Sciences
David Julius '772021Physiology or Medicine 
Andrea Ghez '872020Physics
Esther Duflo PhD '712019Economic Sciences 
William D. Nordhaus PhD '712018Economic Sciences 
Michael Rosbash PhD '712017Physiology or Medicine 
Rainer Weiss '55 PhD '622017Physics
Paul Modrich ’682015Chemistry
Jean Tirole PhD ’812014Economic Sciences
Robert Shiller SM ’68 PhD ’722013Economic Sciences
Adam G. Riess ’922011Physics
Oliver E. Williamson ’552009Economic Sciences
Paul Krugman PhD ’772008Economic Sciences
Wei M. Hao SM ’122007Peace
Andrew Fire PhD ’832006Physiology or Medicine 
George Smoot ’66 PhD ’712006Physics
Robert Aumann SM ’522005Economic Sciences
Robert Horvitz ’682002Physiology or Medicine 
George Akerlof PhD ’662001Economic Sciences
Kofi Annan SM ’722001Peace
Eric Cornell PhD ’902001Physics
Leland Hartwell PhD ’642001Physiology or Medicine 
Joseph Stiglitz PhD ’662001Economic Sciences
Carl Wieman ’732001Physics
Robert Mundell PhD ’561999Economic Sciences
Robert Laughlin PhD ’791998Physics
Robert Merton PhD ’701997Economic Sciences
William Phillips ’761997Physics
Elias Corey, Jr. ’48 PhD ’511990Chemistry
Henry Kendall PhD ’551990Physics
Sidney Altman ’601989Chemistry
Charles J. Pedersen SM ’271987Chemistry
Lawrence Klein PhD ’441980Economic Sciences
Burton Richter ’52 PhD ’561976Physics
John Schrieffer ’531972Physics
Murray Gell-Man PhD ’511969Physics
Robert Mulliken ’171966Chemistry
Richard Feynman ’391965Physics
Robert Burns Woodward ’36 PhD ’371965Chemistry
William Shockley PhD ’361956Physics