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Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards
 

 

Since its inception, the Academy has promoted the recognition of the impressive scientists of St. Louis. This tradition continues with the Annual Outstanding St. Louis Scientist Awards. Each award-winner represents both an extraordinary caliber of expertise and a dedication to fostering science literacy.

The Academy of Science - St. Louis seeks nominations of outstanding women and men in science, engineering, and technology for the 2012 Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards. These awards will be presented at the annual dinner on April 19, 2012. We wish to focus the region's attention upon individuals and institutions known worldwide for their scientific contributions to research, industry, and quality of life. In every category, preference is given to candidates who also have a record of excellence in communicating with the public or mentoring colleagues.

 

 

David Carl Wilson, PhD, Outstanding Scientist Awards Committee Chair, is Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences at Webster University. He has served on the board of the Academy of Science-St. Louis since 2005 and as chair of the Awards Committee since 2008. A philosopher, Wilson served as Associate Provost at UCLA before moving to St. Louis in 2002.
 
The Peter H. Raven Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes a distinguished career of service in science, engineering, or technology.

2012 Awardee

Jeffrey Gordon, MD - Robert J. Glazer distinguished Professor of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University

Dr. Gordon is founding director of the Center for Genome Sciences and System Biology at Washington University and is recognized as the "Inventor of the field of microbiome"--with implications for 21st century medicine, as it further evolves on disease prevention, new definitions of health, new ways for determining the origins of our individual biological differences, and approaches for understanding how changes in our cultural traditions, lifestyles, technology, and biosphere are impacting human microbial ecology and human evolution.

Past Award Recipients:  Marcus E. Raichele, MD (2011); Roger N. Beachy, Ph.D. (2010); Carl Frieden, Ph.D. (2009); Eduardo Slatopolsky, M.D. (2009); William S. Knowles, Ph.D. (2008); Philip D. Stahl, Ph.D. and David C. Van Essen, Ph.D. (2007); Lee Nelkin Robins, Ph.D. (2006); Teresa J. Vietti, M.D. (2005); Brian J. Mitchell, Ph.D. (2004); Ira J. Hirsh, Ph.D. and Nobuo Suga, Ph.D. (2003); Maurice Green, Ph.D. and Patty Jo Watson, Ph.D. (2002); Jerome R. Cox, Jr., Sc.D. and Robert W. Murray, Ph.D. (2001); Philip Needleman, Ph.D. and Robert H. Waterston, M.D., Ph.D. (2000); Frank E. Moss, Ph.D. and William S. Sly, M.D. (1999); Louis V. Avioli, M.D. and Leonard Berg, M.D. (1998); Paul E. Lacy, M.D., Ph.D. and Robert M. Walker, Ph.D. (1997); John Olney, M.D. (1996); Michel Ter-Pogossian, Ph.D. (1995)
 
Science Leadership Award recognizes a distinguished individual — not necessarily a scientist—or organization that has played an important leadership role in the development of science and scientists in the St. Louis region.
2012 Awardees

ORGANIZATION:

James S. McDonnell Foundation - The 21st Century Science Initiative funds research throughout the country in three program areas and Cognitive Rehabilitiation. Scholar Awards in the program area Understanding Human Cognition were provided to a select group of researchers identified by their peers as likely to cintinue to make important contributions to the ongoing effort to better understand the neural underpinnings and behavioral ramifications of human cognition. Brain Cancer Research supports research leading to new knowledge that will eventually lead to increased rates of survival and improve functional recovery for individuals with brain cancer. Stydying Complex Systems supports scholarship and research directed toward the development of theoretical and mathematical tools that can be applied to the study of complex, adaptive, nonlinear systems.

Support of research and applications of research findings to important problems remains a pivotal role for private philanthropy and for the McDonnell Foundation. The foundation is committed to the ideal that having a diversity of private and public funders helps ensure that the most creative work will obtain needed support.

INDIVIDUAL:

Larry J. Shapiro, M.D. - Executive Vice-Chancellor for Medical Affairs & Dean of Washington University Medical School

Larry's stellar leadership of the Medical School has included transforming the research enterprise to embrace clinical and translational research, interdiciplinary teams, visionary genomics and regional partnerships. Most recently, he has implemented Biomed21, which brings together teams of scientists from multiple schools and departments to tackle the important scientific problems facing us today.

Past Award Recipients: Emerson (2011) and Timothy Eberlein, M.D. (2011); Missouri Botanical Garden (2010) and M. Carolyn Baum, Ph.D., OTR (2010); Boeing (2009) and William A. Peck, M.D. (2009); Charles Kilo, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.E. (2008) and The Monsanto Company (2008); William (Bill) Danforth, M.D. and Sigma-Aldrich Corporation (2007)

 
The Trustees Award recognizes outstanding contributions to the Academy of Science – St. Louis in its mission of promoting the understanding and appreciation of science, engineering, and technology.

2012 Awardee

Mabel Louise Purkerson, M.D., Professor Emerita of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine

 As a physician-educator, Mabel's scientific research included pioneering studies in renal physiology notably the pathophysiology of the kidney. Her expertise in electron microscopy, both scanning and transmission, proved invaluable to her collaborators in the renal division. Additionally, she is motivated by the desire to ensure our planet's beauty and resources be preserved for future generations and has exhibited this through, among other projects, securing funding for the Lower Zambezi Partnership Park, which will enable local tribes to build a fish farm that helps residents become self-supporting; and the Trailnet/Confluence Cell-Phone Tour of Area Historic Sites in St. Louis, Mabel holds the prestigious Explorers Club Sweeney Award Medal and was instrumental in the establishment of the Academy's BioBlitz in collaboration with the Explorers Club.

Past Award Recipients: Janey Symington (2011) and Linda Cottler, Ph.D. (2011); Pfizer-St. Louis (2010); Heidi R. Hope, Ph.D. (2010); Lincoln I. Diuguid, Ph.D.(2009); Paul Markovits, Ph.D. and Paul A. Young, Ph.D. (2008) Patricia E. Simmons, Ph.D. (2007); Thomas A. Woolsey, M.D. (2006); Charles R. Granger, Ph.D. (2005); Luther S. Williams, Ph.D. (2004); Will D. Carpenter, Ph.D. (2003); Jessie L. Ternberg, M.D., Ph.D. (2002); Ernest G. Jaworski, Ph.D. (2001); Willis V. Hauser (1999)

 
The Fellows Award recognizes a distinguished individual for outstanding achievement in science.

2012 Awardees

Govindaswami Chinnadurai, Ph.D. - Professor of Molecular Virology, Saint Louis UIniversity

Dr. Chinnadurai ("Chinna") is an internationally recognized leader in the discovery and characterization of pro and anti-apoptotic proteins in cancer and tumor progression. He discovered and characterized the first BH-3-only family protein, BIK, work that launched an entire field of investigation and led to the development of a novel class of anti-cancer drug currently in clinical trials.

Scott Hultgren, Ph.D. -Helen Lehbrink Stoever Professor of Moledular Microbiology; and Director, Center for Women's Infectious Disease Research, Washington University

In recognition of his standing as one of the world's most accomplished microbiologists, Scott was recently elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences. His research on urinary tract infections (the most common infectious complaint of women presenting to primary outpatient clinics has uncovered the novel and elegant mechanisms that bacteria use to fold and assemble the subunits of the fiber into its final structure. His studies have revolutionized our understanding of the molecular basis of chronic and recurrent UTI and his group is developing novel antibiotics and vaccines to prevent and cure UTI. He has also been influential in women's health policy and was a principal contributor to the strategic plan developed by the Office for Research in Women's Health to establish priorities for research at the NIH.

Past Award Recipients: Duane Grandgenett, Ph.D. (2011) and Toni Kutchan, Ph.D. (2011); Alan L. Schwartz, Ph.D. (2010); Cheryl S. Asa, Ph.D.(2009) and Gerald Medoff, M.D. (2009); Martin H. Israel, Ph.D. (2008), Kattesh V. Katti, Ph.D. and Robert M. Senior, M.D. (2007); Barbara Schaal, Ph.D. and Raymond E. Arvidson, Ph.D. (2006); G. Alexander Patterson, M.D. and Robert T. Fraley, Ph.D. (2005); Patricia G. Parker, Ph.D. and Clifford M. Will, Ph.D. (2004); Susan Mackinnon, M.D. and Raymond G. Slavin, M.D. (2003); Carl M. Bender, Ph.D. and Robert E. Ricklefs, Ph.D. (2002); Christopher I. Byrnes, Ph.D. and Dennis W. Choi, M.D., Ph.D. (2001); Allen R. Atkins, Ph.D. and Sarah C. R. Elgin, Ph.D. (2000); Robert B. Belshe, M.D. and Ananthachari Srinivasan, Ph.D. (1999)

 
The James B. Eads Award recognizes a distinguished individual for outstanding achievement in engineering or technology.

2012 Awardees

Kevin L. Deppermann - Chief Engineer-Senior Fellow: Crop Analytics Automation and Engineering Lead

For nearly 34 years, Kevin has made significant contributions not only to Monsanto, but to the entire scientific community. Most recently, he led and worked on a team that conceptualized the first seed chipping system, which has revolutionized the way seeds can be analyzed for future breeding and development of improved seeds. In addition to this invention, he was instrumental in the development of automated imaging systems, advances in operations, and automation for analyzing liquid formations, all of which have played important roles in transforming plant breeding. He has been issued nearly 30 U.S. patents in areas of automation and engineering and was honored as Inventor of the Year in 2010 by the Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis. He also received the Queeny Award, Monsanto's highest award for science and technology.

Stuart A. Solin, Ph.D. - Charles M. Hohenberg Professor of Experimental Physics, Washington University

Stuart is recognized for significant discoveries and initiatives in the fields of Condensed Matter Physics and Nanosciences. Most recently, as inventor of the EMR sensor device concept, he has seeded a hugely important area of research which has now been taken up extensively by industry around the globe. His work has the capacity to revolutionize data storage and retrieval in computers. Stuart has already started work on the biological and medical application of his new class of sensors. Indications are that EMR and EEC nanoscale sensors can be used for cancer detection.

Past Award Recipients: Ettigounder (Samy) Ponnusamy, Ph.D. (2011) and Alexander Rubin, Ph.D. (2011); David a. Fischhoff, Ph.D. (2010) and Stephen R. Padgette, Ph.D. (2010); Ramesh K. Agarwal, Ph.D. (2009); Sherman J. Silber, M.D., F.A.C.S. (2008); Robert B. Horsch, Ph.D. (2006); Krishnan K. Sankaran, Ph.D. (2005); Rudolph N. Yurkovich (2004); Donald P. Ames, Ph.D. (2003); Richard E. Pinckert, Ph.D. and Jonathan S. Turner, Ph.D. (2002); Richard D. Bucholz, M.D. (2001)

The Interdisciplinary/Collaborative Science Award recognizes outstanding achievement in science, engineering, or technology that results from collaboration among two and/or more individuals across disciplinary or institutional boundaries.

2012 Awardee

Timothy Ley, M.D. - Lewis T. and Rosalind B. Apple Chair in Oncology; Professor of Medicine and Genetics, Department of Medicine; and Associate Director, The Genome Institute of Washington University

Elaine Mardis, Ph.D.- Professor of Genetics & Molecular Microbiology; Director of Technology Development & Co-Director, The Genome Institute of Washington University

Richard Wilson, Ph.D.- Professor of Genetics and Co-Director, The Genome Institute of Washington University

In 2008, Drs. Wilson, Mardin and Ley led the team that published a description of the first cancer genome of an Acute Mydloid Leukemia (AML) in patients. This feat was described by Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, as "a true landmark in cancer research." Their collaborative work has helped lay the foundation of cancer genomic research, diagnostics and therapeutics. Together, they have been able to push the field of cancer research even further than would have been possible on their own. Their translational approach--starting with the inner workings of a cancer genome through to the development of novel forms of treatment. This innovative way of looking at cancer is ushering in a ew era of personalized medicine. Their work with St. Jude Children's Hospital (a $65 million collaboration) is defining the mutation spectrum seen in pediatric malignacies and will generate a public database to be shared with the international scientific community with the goal of accelerating progress against these childhood cancers.

This week it was announced the Institute will receive a $114 million four-year grant from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

"This new grant allows us to build on our earlier work and more effectively decode the information contained in our genomes to better understand, diagnose and cure disease," says Richard K. Wilson, PhD, director of the Genome Institute and a professor of genetics. "In this next phase of funding, we will discover new sequence variants that can be used to select the best treatment options for patients - a primary goal of personalized medicine."

New Award in 2012 

The Innovation Award recognizes a scientist or engineer under age 40 who has demonstrated exceptional potential for future accomplishments in science, engineering or technology.

2012 Awardee

Audrey Odom, MD, Ph.D. - Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Molecular Microbiology, Washington University

Audrey is dissecting a key metabolic pathway in malaria which does not exist in humans. By targeting this pathway, her long-term goals are to develop antimalarials with minimal heart toxicity. She recently demonstrated that fosmidomycin (an antimalarial agency currently in clinical trials of combination therapy) inhibits isoprenoid biosynthesis in cultured malaria parasites without significant off-target effects (Biochemistry 2011). Her work is creative, bold and focused. According to Alan Schwartz, she is a "budding exceptional physician-clinical scientist, and one who is destined to be truly outstanding."

Past Award Recipients: Randall J. Bateman, M.D. (2010); Ganesh K. Venayagamoorthy, Ph.D. (2010); Jonathan M. Chase, PhD. (2009); Timothy E. Holy, Ph.D. (2009); Sonya Bahr, Ph.D. (2008); Eric C. Leuthardt, M.D. and Ali Shilatifard, Ph.D. (2007); Shelley D. Minteer, Ph.D. (2005); James H. Buckley, Ph.D. (2004); Phyllis I. Hanson, M.D., Ph.D. and James P. McCarter, M.D., Ph.D. (2003); Karen L. Wooley, Ph.D. (2002); Jonathan B. Losos, Ph.D. (2001); Steven F. Dowdy, Ph.D. and Michael E. Wysession, Ph.D. (2000); Laura L. Dugan, M.D. (1999); Scott Hultgren, Ph.D. (1998); James M. Bornholdt, Ph.D. (1997); Alison Goate, Ph.D. and Robert D. Davinroy (1996); Jacob D. Langer, M.D. (1995)

 
The Science Educator Award recognizes a distinguished individual or organization on the basis of outstanding contributions to science education or to the public understanding of science, engineering, or technology.

 

 

2012 Awardees

Pamely Gay, Ph.D. - Assistant Research Professor, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville

Pamela is a world leader in citizen science and the use of new media in astronomy education with an international following for her innovative podcasts, blogs and articles. (She is co-host of Astronomy Cast, consistently listed in the top 25 Science & Medicine section of the iTunes Library.) She is doing pioneering research on motivations in citizen science and serves as an empowering mentor for the undergraduate and graduate students on her research team. Dr. Gay is sought out by the most prestigious astronomy conferences in the world to serve as an invited speaker; equally she is sought after by top astronomy researchers who wish to collaborate with her to promote their science to the general public.

Michael W. Friedlander, Ph.D. - Emeritus Professor of Physics, Washington University

For more than four decades, Michael has played a major role in science education. Since 1994, each semester he has organized a series of four "Saturday Science" public lectures in the Washington University Physics Department. The 200-seat lecture hall is often filled. Beyond the region, Michael has been an influence for science understanding nationally with five books published, all well written for the general public. The two published by Harvard University Press describe the history of the study of cosmic rays and what is now known about these energetic particles--anarea of astrophysics to which he has contributed significant original research.

Past Award Recipients: Young Scientist Program, Washington University in St. Louis (2011); Harold H. Harris, Ph.D. (2010); Victoria Lynn May (2009); Harold R. Messler, B.S. (2008) and John Ridgen, Ph.D. (2008); Patrick L. Osborne, Ph.D. (2007); Kenneth Mares, Ph.D. (2006); Robert A. Williams, Ph.D. (2005); Paul H. Young, M.D. and William L. McConnell (2004)

 
 
In every category, preference is given to candidates who also have a record of excellence in communicating with the public or mentoring colleagues.
Apr 19th, 2012 (Thu)
2012 Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards Dinner
Time: 5:30 PM - 9:00 PM


2012 Outstanding St. Louis Scientist Awards
to be presented at the Chase Park Plaza

For details call Peggy James Nacke at 314-533-8291

 

2011 Outstanding St. Louis Scientists Awards

click here to view 2011 dinner photos