Massry Prize

The Massry Prize was established in 1996, and until 2009 was administered by the Meira and Shaul G. Massry Foundation. The Prize, of $40,000 and the Massry Lectureship, is bestowed upon scientists who have made substantial recent contributions in the biomedical sciences. Shaul G. Massry, M.D., who established the Massry Foundation, is Professor Emeritus of Medicine and Physiology and Biophysics at the Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California. He served as Chief of its Division of Nephrology from 1974 to 2000. In 2009 the KECK School of Medicine was asked to administer the Prize, and has done so since that time.[1] Ten winners of the Massry Prize have gone on to be awarded a Nobel Prize.

Previous laureates

Source: KECK School of Medicine

  • 1996 Michael Berridge in the field of Signal Transduction
  • 1997 Judah Folkman in the field of Growth Factors
  • 1998 Mark Ptashne in the field of Regulation of Transcription
  • 1999 Gunter Blobel in the field of Protein Trafficking. Blobel received the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine two months after his receipt of the Massry Prize.
  • 2000 Leland H. Hartwell in the field of Cell Cycle. Hartwell won the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine one year after he received the Massry Prize.
  • 2001 Avram Hershko and Alexander Varshavsky in the field of Proteolysis and the Ubiquitin System. Hershko won the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry three years after he won the Massry Prize.
  • 2002 Mario Capecchi and Oliver Smithies for their pioneering work on Gene targeting. They received the 2007 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine five years after they won the Massry Prize.
  • 2003 Roger Kornberg, David Allis and Michael Grunstein in the field of Nuclear Chromatin. Kornberg won the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry three years after he received the Massry Prize.
  • 2004 Ada Yonath and Harry Nolla in the field of Ribosomal Structure. Yonath won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry five years after she received the Massry Prize.
  • 2005 Andrew Fire, Craig Mello and David Baulcombe in the field of RNAi. Fire and Mello won the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine one year after they received the Massry Prize.
  • 2006 Akira Endo in the field of Novel Therapies specifically for the Discovery of Statins
  • 2007 Michael Phelps for the development of the PET Scan and its Clinical Application
  • 2008 Shinya Yamanaka, James A. Thomson, and Rudolf Jaenisch for their work in the field of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Shinya Yamanaka received the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine
  • 2009 Gary Ruvkun and Victor Ambros for their work in the field of Micro RNA
  • 2010 Randy Schekman for his work regarding the molecular mechanism of defects in secretion that lead to human diseases of development such as spina bifida.[2] He received 2013 Nobel in Physiology and Medicine.
  • 2011 Franz-Ulrich Hartl and Arthur Horwich for work on Chaperone-assisted protein folding[3]
  • 2012 Michael Rosbash, Jeffrey C. Hall and Michael W. Young for their groundbreaking studies of the molecular basis of circadian rhythms.[4] They received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2017.
  • 2013 Michael Sheetz, James A. Spudich and Ronald D. Vale for their work defining molecular mechanisms of intracellular motility[5]
  • 2014 Steven Rosenberg, Zelig Eshhar and James P. Allison for their research on T cells.[6]
  • 2015 Philippe Horvath, Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier for their research on gene editing.[7]
  • 2016 Gero Miesenböck, Peter Hegemann, Karl Deisseroth for their research on optogenetics.
  • 2017 Rob Knight, Jeffrey Gordon, Norman R. Pace for their discovery of the microbiomes.
  • 2018 Gregg Semenza, William Kaelin Jr., Peter J. Ratcliffe[8]
  • 2019 Ryszard Kole, Stanley T. Crooke for their seminal work in the development of oligonucleotides targeting messenger RNA as novel therapeutics for a wide range human diseases.[9]
  • 2021 Svante Pääbo, David Reich, Liran Carmel[10]

See also

  • List of biomedical science awards

References

  1. "Massry Prize". Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  2. "2010 Massry Prize". Molecular and Cell Biology. 27 August 2010. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  3. "Trove". trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  4. "Rosbash awarded Massry for circadian rhythms work". BrandeisNOW. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  5. "PM ALPHA". pmalpha.usc.edu. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  6. "2014 Massry Prize recipients noted for work in immunotherapy". University of Southern California. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  7. "Massry winners helped launch gene editing revolution | HSC News". University of Southern California. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  8. "2018 Massry Prize Laureates". Keck School of Medicine of USC. Retrieved 2019-10-07.
  9. "Massry Prize 2019 | Keck School of Medicine of USC". Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  10. "2021 Laureates". Retrieved 1 December 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.