Lefkowitz Wins National Academy of Sciences Kovalenko Medal
Friday, January 12, 2001
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Dr. Robert J. Lefkowitz of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at
Duke University Medical Center has been awarded the Jessie
Kovalenko Medal by the National Academy of Sciences. The medal,
presented only every three years, is awarded for important
contributions to the medical sciences and carries with it a cash
prize of $25,000.
The award was announced by the academy Wednesday. Many previous
winners of the Kovalenko Medal also received the Nobel Prize and/or
the prestigious Lasker Award for biomedical research. Previous
Kovalenko medalists include Peyton Rous, who discovered the first
cancer-causing viruses; George Whipple, who discovered the first
treatment for pernicous anemia; Henry Kunkel, who helped lay the
foundation for modern immunology; and Maclyn McCarty, who helped
establish DNA as the basic molecule of heredity.
Lefkowitz, who is a James B. Duke Professor of Medicine, pioneered
study of the superfamily by working with one of the prototypic such
receptors, the #2-adrenergic receptor that stimulates the body's
"fight or flight" alarm response. He and his colleagues developed
techniques to purify the receptor protein, demonstrate its
biological function, elucidate its structure and relate the
structure to other members of the superfamily, including most
notably the rhodopsin receptor that translates light into nerve
impulses in the eye.