Sunday, 5th April 2026
Sunday, 5th April 2026

World

Unreachable Nobel Winner Hiking ‘Off the Grid’

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 7th October 2025, 6:47 AM

Unreachable Nobel Winner Hiking ‘Off the Grid’

One of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine winners is not only a leading medical researcher but also an exemplar of work-life balance — so much so that he may not yet know he has won.

Fred Ramsdell: The Hiking Laureate

Fred Ramsdell, honoured on Monday alongside Mary Brunkow of Seattle and Shimon Sakaguchi of Osaka University, is currently “living his best life” on an off-the-grid hiking expedition, according to a spokesperson from his San Francisco-based lab, Sonoma Biotherapeutics.

  • His digital detox has left the Nobel committee unable to contact him directly.
  • Jeffrey Bluestone, Ramsdell’s friend and lab co-founder, admitted he had also struggled to reach him: “I have been trying to get a hold of him myself. I think he may be backpacking in the backcountry in Idaho.”

The committee faced additional challenges contacting Brunkow, as both US West Coast researchers are nine hours behind Stockholm. However, they eventually succeeded in reaching her.

“I asked them to, if they have a chance, call me back,” said Thomas Perlmann, Secretary-General of the Nobel Committee, during the press conference announcing the winners.

Groundbreaking Discoveries

The three laureates were recognised for their pioneering work on the immune system’s “security guards”, known as regulatory T-cells.

Laureate Birth Year Affiliation Key Contribution
Shimon Sakaguchi 1949 Osaka University, Japan Discovered a previously unknown class of immune cells in 1995 that protect the body from autoimmune diseases
Mary Brunkow 1961 Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle Contributed to discovery of regulatory T-cell function in 2001
Fred Ramsdell 1959 Sonoma Biotherapeutics, San Francisco Co-discovered regulatory T-cell role in preventing autoimmune responses in 2001

Their research focuses on peripheral immune tolerance, a mechanism that prevents the immune system from attacking the body. These findings have opened new fields of study and facilitated the development of potential treatments currently under clinical evaluation.

  • Sakaguchi, 74, made the first key discovery in 1995.
  • Brunkow, now a senior project manager, and Ramsdell, 64, made subsequent breakthroughs in 2001.

This year’s prize highlights the importance of regulatory T-cells in maintaining immune system balance, while also reminding the world that some Nobel winners are too busy exploring the wilderness to answer their phones.

Comments