Abstract
On October 7, 2024 the Nobel Assembly of the Karolinska Institute
awarded this year’s Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Victor
Ambrose and Gary Ruvkun “for the discovery of microRNA and its role in
post-transcriptional gene regulation”
(https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/2024/press-release/). The
prize-winning research was published in back-to-back 1993 papers in Cell
demonstrating in the nematode worm C. elegans that the lin-4 microRNA
regulates the translation and degradation of lin-14 mRNA
post-transcriptionally in the cytoplasm during transition from the first
to the second stage of larval developments by base-pairing to the target
mRNA. When Ruvkun and colleagues later identified and characterized the
more evolutionarily conserved let-7 microRNA to play a similar
post-transcriptional regulatory role during the transition from late
larval to adult stages in animals from mollusks to vertebrates (but not
in plants, yeast, bacteria, jellyfish or sponges), the scientific
community began to accept microRNAs as part of the canonical
developmental regulatory machinery of multicellular organisms [1].