In 2006, Mello and Fire received the Nobel Prize for work that began in 1998, when Mello and Fire along with their colleagues (SiQun Xu, Mary Montgomery, Stephen Kostas, and Sam Driver) published a paper in the journal
Nature detailing how tiny snippets of
RNA fool the cell into destroying the gene's messenger RNA (
mRNA) before it can produce a protein - effectively shutting specific genes down. In the annual
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Scientific Meeting held on November 13, 2006 in
Ashburn, Virginia, Mello recounted the phone call that he received announcing that he had won the prize. He recalls that it was shortly after 4:30 am and he had just finished checking on his daughter, and returned to his bedroom. The phone rang (or rather the green light was blinking) and his wife told him not to answer, as it was a prank call. Upon questioning his wife, she revealed that it had rung while he was out of the room and someone was playing a bad joke on them by saying that he had won the Nobel prize. When he told her that they were actually announcing the Nobel prize winners on this very day, he said "her jaw dropped." He answered the phone, and the voice on the other end told him to get dressed, and that in half an hour his life was about to change. The Nobel citation, issued by Sweden's
Karolinska Institute, said: "This year's Nobel Laureates have discovered a fundamental mechanism for controlling the flow of genetic information." Mello and Fire's research, conducted at the
Carnegie Institution for Science (Fire) and the
University of Massachusetts Medical School (Mello), had shown that in fact
RNA plays a key role in gene regulation. According to Professor Nick Hastie, director of the
Medical Research Council's Human Genetics Unit, said: "It is very unusual for a piece of work to completely revolutionize the whole way we think about biological processes and regulation, but this has opened up a whole new field in biology." ==Philosophical outlook==