Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

December/November 2007   Volume 3 Issue 6

Inside this issue

Cover stories

For patients, research ... and for Yale

‘Thriving survivor’ tells his tale

Opportunities for giving to Smilow Cancer Hospital

Partnerships

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: Sukru Emre

Structural biologist wins top science prize

Three faculty members elected to Institute of Medicine

Expert on protein-folding is named Sterling Professor

Surgical oncologist is appointed Lampman Professor of Surgery

Young scientists honored at White House

New AAAS Fellows

Out & about

Science

New building is a ‘place for great science’

Connecticut high schoolers get a taste of real-world research

New NIH program funds scientific ‘innovators’ at Yale

Advances: Does breastfeeding build better brains? | An Akt against heart disease | Of bugs, bivalves and breathing | Adding staying power to brain tumor drugs



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Expert on protein-folding is named Sterling Professor

School of Medicine researcher Arthur L. Horwich, M.D., has been named Sterling Professor of Genetics and Pediatrics. The Sterling Professorships, endowed by John William Sterling of the Yale College Class of 1864, are among the highest honors bestowed on Yale faculty.

Arthur Horwich

Arthur Horwich

Horwich, a member of the medical faculty since 1984 and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator since 1990, studies how the chains of amino acids that make up proteins fold into the unique three-dimensional shapes needed for the proteins to successfully perform their tasks.

Horwich studies chaperonins, molecular machines that play a key role in the proper folding of proteins.

The chaperonins, present in all living cells, are part of a quality-control network that ensures that proteins are properly configured, and that poorly folded proteins are targeted for destruction. Clumps of unfolded or improperly folded proteins called aggregates have been associated with such conditions as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, “mad cow” disease and the paralyzing nerve disorder amytrophic lateral sclerosis.

Horwich received his B.A. and M.D. degrees from Brown University. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2003, the Gairdner International Award in 2004, the 2006 Stein and Moore Award of the Protein Society and the Wiley Prize in the Biomedical Sciences in February of this year.

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