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Unreachable Nobel winner hiking 'off the grid'

The Stockholm-based Nobel Committee struggled to reach two of this year's medicine laureates -- one is thought to be hiking "off the grid"
The Nobel Committee struggled to reach two of this year's medicine laureates -- one is thought to be hiking "off the grid"

One of this year's Nobel winners is a leading medical researcher who also offers a shining example of work-life balance—so much so that he might not know he won.

Fred Ramsdell was among those honored Monday with a 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine, but he's currently "living his best life" on an "off the grid" hiking foray, a spokesperson from his San Francisco-based lab, Sonoma Biotherapeutics, told AFP.

Ramsdell shared the prestigious prize with Mary Brunkow of Seattle, Washington, and Shimon Sakaguchi of Osaka University in Japan for their discoveries related to the functioning of the immune system.

But the laureate's digital detox means the Nobel committee has been unable to reach him and break the news.

Jeffrey Bluestone, a friend of Ramsdell's and co-founder of the lab, said the researcher deserves credit but he can't reach him, either.

"I have been trying to get a hold of him myself. I think he may be backpacking in the backcountry in Idaho," Bluestone told AFP.

The Nobel committee also hit a roadblock trying to reach Brunkow—both researchers are based on the US West Coast, which is nine hours behind Stockholm—but eventually got ahold of her.

"I asked them to, if they have a chance, call me back," said Thomas Perlmann, secretary-general of the Nobel committee, at the press conference announcing the winners.

The three won the prize for research that identified the immune system's "security guards," called regulatory T-cells.

Their work concerns "peripheral immune tolerance" that prevents the from harming the body, and has led to a new field of research and the development of potential medical treatments now being evaluated in .

Sakaguchi, 74, made the first key find in 1995, discovering a previously unknown class of immune cells that protect the body from .

Brunkow, born in 1961 and now a senior project manager at the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle, and Ramsdell, a 64-year-old senior advisor at Sonoma Biotherapeutics, made the other key discovery in 2001.

© 2025 AFP

Citation: Unreachable Nobel winner hiking 'off the grid' (2025, October 7) retrieved 8 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-unreachable-nobel-winner-hiking-grid.html
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