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- Challenges and Chances: A Review of the 1st Stem Cell Community Day
- Summertime, and the Livin’ Is Easy…
- Follow-on-Biologics – More than Simple Generics
- Bacteria Versus Body Cells: A 1:1 Tie
- Behind the Crime Scene: How Biological Traces Can Help to Convict Offenders
- Every 3 Seconds Someone in the World Is Affected by Alzheimer's
- HIV – It’s Still Not Under Control…
- How Many Will Be Convicted This Time?
- Malaria – the Battle is Not Lost
- Physicians on Standby: The Annual Flu Season Can Be Serious
- At the Forefront in Fighting Cancer
- Molecular Motors: Think Small and yet Smaller Again…
- Liquid Biopsy: Novel Methods May Ease Cancer Detection and Therapy
- They Are Invisible, Sneaky and Disgusting – But Today It’s Their Special Day!
- How Many Cells Are in Your Body? Probably More Than You Think!
- What You Need to Know about Antibiotic Resistance – Findings, Facts and Good Intentions
- Why Do Old Men Have Big Ears?
- The Condemned Live Longer: A Potential Paradigm Shift in Genetics
- From Research to Commerce
- Chronobiology – How the Cold Seasons Influence Our Biorhythms
- Taskforce Microbots: Targeted Treatment from Inside the Body
- Eyes on Cancer Therapy
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- 2000年の受賞者
2000 Award Winner Dr. Dario Alessi MRC Protein Phosphorylation Unit, University of Dundee, Scotland
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The work of Dario Alessi
The work of Dr. Alessi Insulin has long been known as a hormone involved in blood sugar regulation. It is used in the treatment of diabetes, a disease which afflicts five million patients in Germany alone, and 150 million patients worldwide. The mechanism of action of insulin remained an enigma for quite some time now. Dr. Dario Alessi has recently contributed significantly to our understanding of insulin action. He has discovered an enzyme, called protein-dependent-kinase 1 (PDK1), which activates another protein, protein kinase B, through phosphorylation. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation have long been known as biochemical reactions involved in the regulation of cellular processes. In the particular case of insulin action it turned out to be quite complicated to identify the contribution of phosphorylation reactions. The activation step, catalyzed by PDK1, proceeds in two steps. The first occurs spontaneously, the second requires another protein, called PIF, for PDK1 interacting fragment. Only through this two-step activation procedure can PDK1 be activated to full activity. Dr. Alessi has not only identified these novel insights but has already shown the way of how the activation step through an additional protein can be used to develop drugs which modulate the insulin signaling process. (Abstract from Ernst-Ludwig Winnacker's speech held at the Eppendorf Award Ceremony on November 23, 2000.)
The work of Dr. Alessi Insulin has long been known as a hormone involved in blood sugar regulation. It is used in the treatment of diabetes, a disease which afflicts five million patients in Germany alone, and 150 million patients worldwide. The mechanism of action of insulin remained an enigma for quite some time now. Dr. Dario Alessi has recently contributed significantly to our understanding of insulin action. He has discovered an enzyme, called protein-dependent-kinase 1 (PDK1), which activates another protein, protein kinase B, through phosphorylation. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation have long been known as biochemical reactions involved in the regulation of cellular processes. In the particular case of insulin action it turned out to be quite complicated to identify the contribution of phosphorylation reactions. The activation step, catalyzed by PDK1, proceeds in two steps. The first occurs spontaneously, the second requires another protein, called PIF, for PDK1 interacting fragment. Only through this two-step activation procedure can PDK1 be activated to full activity. Dr. Alessi has not only identified these novel insights but has already shown the way of how the activation step through an additional protein can be used to develop drugs which modulate the insulin signaling process. (Abstract from Ernst-Ludwig Winnacker's speech held at the Eppendorf Award Ceremony on November 23, 2000.)
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