Medicine@Yale Magazine

Medicine@Yale.

June/July 2005   Volume 1 Issue 1

Inside this issue

Cover stories

The big questions

New Kavli center for neuroscience research will untangle mysteries of the human brain

Molecular gamble

Yale physiologist elected to National Academy of Sciences

Trailblazer

Magazine innovator celebrates 101 years with gifts for his medical school “family”

People

Lifelines: Expert on gene-swapping joined molecular biology at its very beginnings

For new deputy dean, focus is on top-notch care, service to patients

Kidney researchers celebrate a banner year

Unconventional physician-filmmaker receives “genius” grant

New HHMI investigator says appointment liberates his science

Awards & honors

Science

Analysis of genome reveals clues to macular degeneration

Vaccinating wildlife suggests a new strategy in continuing battle against Lyme disease

Advances:  Salmonella “syringe” ready for its close-up | Possible cancer inhibitor found in worm study

Health

A heart is repaired, the patient grows up: Program helps growing number of adult survivors of congenital disease

More integrated care for cancer patients, collaboration of scientists and clinicians are goals of proposed new YNHH building

Advances: New test easier for patients to swallow. | Study finds payoff in wider HIV testing

Partnerships

Pfizer and Yale join forces for research and education

A long, fruitful collaboration: Bristol-Myers Squibb and Yale

Drive to cure blindness hits $5 million

Class of 1954 makes a lasting impact with scholarship gift

Grants and contracts

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Kidney researchers celebrate a banner year

First Stefan Somlo, M.D., Yale’s chief of nephrology, learned that he would be heading off to Singapore in late June to accept the field’s top award for research in polycystic kidney disease, a life-threatening condition that affects more than 12.5 million people worldwide.

Next Steven C. Hebert, M.D., the chair of physiology, was tapped to receive the A.N. Richards Award at the same June meeting, the World Congress of Nephrology. Then another Yale kidney researcher, Walter Boron, M.D., Ph.D., was selected for the Homer Smith Award from the American Society of Nephrology (ASN). Finally, Hebert was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (see related story, Yale Physiologist Elected to National Academy of Sciences) for his discoveries leading to new drugs that benefit more than 1 million kidney patients worldwide.

Stefan Somlo

Stefan Somlo

Walter Boron

Walter Boron

Is there something in the water?

“It’s just that Yale has great strength and great depth in this area of science,” says Dean Robert J. Alpern, M.D., a nephrologist himself, who was attracted to Yale in part by its long tradition in the field dating to the work of John Peters, M.D., durring the 1930s.

Somlo, the C.N.H. Long Professor of Medicine, and a colleague will share the Lillian Jean Kaplan International Prize for Advancement in the Understanding of Polycystic Kidney Disease for their work in discovering genes that cause polycystic kidney and liver diseases. Somlo and frequent collaborator Gregory G. Germino, M.D., of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine will receive $50,000 each from the PKD Foundation and the International Society of Nephrology.

National Academy honoree Hebert will receive the A.N. Richards Award from the International Society of Nephrology (ISN) for his fundamental discoveries about how the kidney regulates salt balance. The Richards Award, which carries a $10,000 cash prize, is the ISN’s highest award for basic research. It is presented every two years at the World Congress and is named for Alfred Newton Richards (1876–1966), a member of the Yale College Class of 1897.

Boron is the eighth Yale professor to receive the Homer W. Smith Award, the ASN’s top honor for basic research. The award, which carries a $10,000 cash prize, will be presented at the ASN’s annual meeting in November in Philadelphia.

Boron, a professor of cellular and molecular physiology, has performed pioneering work on the processes regulating intracellular pH, which must be maintained in the neutral range for normal cell function. His contributions include the development of methods to measure and manipulate intracellular pH, the use of these methods to discover several transport processes for acids and bases across cell membranes and the cloning of cDNAs that encode several of these transporters.

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Copyright 2005, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu.