NAS Award in Molecular Biology

Check all the winners of NAS Award in Molecular Biology.
Year Winner Winner Work
2013 Sue Biggins For the isolation and in vitro characterization of a functional kinetochore complex, and for the use of that system to explore kinetochore function.
2012 Zhijian James Chen For his creative use of elegant biochemistry both in elucidating an unsuspected role for polyubiquitin in a kinase-signaling cascade important for cancer and immunity and in discovering a novel link between innate immunity and a mitochondrial membrane protein that forms prion-like polymers to trigger antiviral responses.
2011 James M. Berger For elucidating the structures of topoisomerases and helicases and providing insights into the biochemical mechanisms that mediate the replication and transcription of DNA.
2010 Jeannie T. Lee By using X-chromosome inactivation as a model system, Lee has made unique contributions to our understanding of epigenetic regulation on a global scale, including the role of long, non-coding RNAs, interchromosomal interactions, and nuclear compartmentalization.
2009 Stephen P. Bell For groundbreaking studies illuminating the mechanisms of DNA replication in eukaryotic cells.
2008 Angelika Amon For groundbreaking studies that have provided insight into the mechanism of the central process of chromosome segregation and the regulation of segregation.
2007 Gregory J. Hannon For elucidation of the enzymatic engine for RNA interference.
2006 Ronald Breaker For establishing a new mode of regulation of gene expression in which metabolites regulate the activity of their cognate pathways by directly binding to mRNA.
Tina M. Henkin For establishing a new mode of regulation of gene expression in which metabolites regulate the activity of their cognate pathways by directly binding to mRNA.
2005 David Bartel For his discoveries on the repertoire of catalytic RNA and the analysis of micro RNA genes and their targets.
2004 Xiaodong Wang For his biochemical studies of apoptosis which have resolved a molecular pathway leading in and out of the mitochondrion.
2003 Andrew Fire For inventing methods to inactivate genes by RNA interference and helping to elucidate their underlying mechanism and biological function.
Craig Mello For inventing methods to inactivate genes by RNA interference and helping to elucidate their underlying mechanism and biological function.
2002 Stephen Elledge For his innovative contributions at the forefront of the field of cell cycle checkpoints and his elucidation of pathways and mechanisms involved in DNA damage responses.
2001 Erin K. O'Shea For contributions to our understanding of signal transduction, regulation of protein movement into and out of the nucleus, and how phosphorylation controls protein activity.
2000 Patrick Brown For his intellectual leadership in functional genomics, most notably the development of a reliable and accessible DNA microarray system to measure genome-wide gene expression.
1999 Clifford J. Tabin For his contributions in analyzing genes that establish asymmetric body patterns and control limb development in vertebrates.
1998 Philip A. Beachy For his studies of a developmental morphogen, its processing and structure, and its covalent attachment to cholesterol.
1997 Richard Scheller For their performance of elegant experiments to resolve the molecular components responsible for controlling neurotransmitter vesicle release and chemical communication within the nervous system.
Thomas C. Südhof For their performance of elegant experiments to resolve the molecular components responsible for controlling neurotransmitter vesicle release and chemical communication within the nervous system.
1996 Michael Levine For his insightful contributions to our understanding of gene regulation networks and molecular mechanisms governing the development of organisms with a segmented body plan.
1995 Daniel E. Gottschling For his elucidation, by experiments elegant in their simplicity, of the relationship between the ends of yeast chromosomes and transcriptional silencing.
1994 Gerald Joyce For independently developing in vitro evolution of RNA catalysts. Their work produced RNA enzymes with novel specificities, while illuminating our view of natural selection.
Jack W. Szostak For independently developing in vitro evolution of RNA catalysts. Their work produced RNA enzymes with novel specificities, while illuminating our view of natural selection.
1993 Peter S. Kim For his pathfinding research in structural biology, which has elucidated both the pathway of protein folding and mechanisms of macromolecular recognition.
1992 Bruce Baker For their creative use of genetics and molecular biology to define how sex is determined in Drosophila. Their experiments have shown how the ratio of sex chromosomes to autosomes can initiate a novel regulatory pathway involving RNA processing.
Thomas W. Cline For their creative use of genetics and molecular biology to define how sex is determined in Drosophila. Their experiments have shown how the ratio of sex chromosomes to autosomes can initiate a novel regulatory pathway involving RNA processing.
1991 Steven L. McKnight For advancing our understanding of transcriptional regulation by devising novel strategies and applying elegant biochemistry to reveal fundamental mechanisms underlying gene expression and development.
Robert Tjian For advancing our understanding of transcriptional regulation by devising novel strategies and applying elegant biochemistry to reveal fundamental mechanisms underlying gene expression and development.
1990 Elizabeth Blackburn For her discovery of the nature of DNA at the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes and the enzyme that is necessary to complete chromosomal replication.
1989 Kiyoshi Mizuuchi For bringing about remarkable advances in our understanding of transposition and other forms of genetic recombination.
1988 H. Robert Horvitz For significant contributions to the genetic analysis of the development of cell lineages in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.
1987 Thomas Cech For the astonishing discovery of RNA-catalyzed self-splicing of introns and the analysis of the chemistry of RNA-catalyzed reactions.
1986 Robert G. Roeder For his pioneering studies of eukaryotic RNA polymerases and the factors that regulate their activity.
1985 Gerald M. Rubin For adding a new dimension to eukaryotic genetics and developmental biology by developing a method to introduce and stably integrate cloned genes into the germ cells of living Drosophila.
Allan C. Spradling For adding a new dimension to eukaryotic genetics and developmental biology by developing a method to introduce and stably integrate cloned genes into the germ cells of living Drosophila.
1984 Geoffrey M. Cooper For the identification and characterization of cellular oncogenes of human and animal tumors, thereby providing seminal insights into the mechanisms of carcinogenesis.
Robert Weinberg For the identification and characterization of cellular oncogenes of human and animal tumors, thereby providing seminal insights into the mechanisms of carcinogenesis.
1983 James C. Wang For his ingenious studies of the topological properties of the DNA double helix and his discovery of the important class of enzymes know as DNA topoisomerases.
1982 Joan A. Steitz For contributing to our understanding of how RNA molecules are recognized by enzymes and discovering the roles played by small ribonucleoprotein molecules in RNA processing.
1981 Ronald W. Davis For their outstanding contributions to the molecular biology of the simple eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Both have opened vistas of genetic analysis by the development of new methods, in particular, the development and utilization of molecular cloning in yeast.
Gerald Fink For their outstanding contributions to the molecular biology of the simple eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Both have opened vistas of genetic analysis by the development of new methods, in particular, the development and utilization of molecular cloning in yeast.
1980 Phillip Allen Sharp For his pioneering and continuing contributions to our understanding of messenger RNA biogenesis in mammalian cells.
1979 Mark Ptashne For his outstanding contributions to our understanding of gene regulation through the studies of the virus Lambda.
1978 Günter Blobel For elucidating mechanisms of passage of secreted proteins into and across membranes.
1977 Aaron J. Shatkin For his contributions to the understanding of eukaryotic, viral, and cellular messenger RNAs.
1976 Daniel Nathans For his innovative use of molecular and cell biological tools to analyze the genome of an oncogenic virus.
1975 Bruce Alberts For the isolation of proteins required for DNA replication and genetic recombination and the elucidation of how they interact with DNA.
1974 David Baltimore For his distinguished leadership in virus research, and for his discoveries on the reproduction and enzymology of RNA viruses that has greatly advanced the science of molecular biology.
1973 Donald D. Brown For his studies of the structure, regulation, and evolution of genes in animals, particularly the genes specifying ribosomal RNA in Xenopus and silk fibroin in Bombix.
1972 Howard Martin Temin For his work leading to the discovery of reverse transcription.
1971 Masayasu Nomura For his studies on the structure and function of ribosomes and their molecular components.
1970 A. Dale Kaiser For his discovery that pure phage lambda DNA can infect susceptible bacterial cells and produce progeny, and for the effect of this discovery on the whole field of bacterial virus genetics.
1969 William B. Wood, III For his genetic dissection of the mechanism of assembly of the bacterial virus particle and reconstruction of the virus in vitro.
1968 Walter Gilbert For his signal contribution to the understanding of the regulatory mechanisms operative in genetic control of protein synthesis.
1967 Robert W. Holley For his elucidation of the full sequence of nucleotides in the molecule of a soluble RNA.
1966 Norton Zinder For his discovery of RNA bacteriophages, a new class of bacteria-attacking viruses, which have provided researchers with a highly valuable and convenient method of studying fundamental processes in all living cells.
1965 Robert Stuart Edgar For his development and application of the method of conditional lethal mutants for the analysis of the genetic control of morpho-genesis at the molecular level.
1964 Charles Yanofsky For his achievements in demonstrating how changes in the gene produce changes in the way protein is made in the body.
1963 M. S. Meselson For his leading role in developing and applying methods to measure the transmission of genetic information in the cell.
1962 Marshall Warren Nirenberg For his studies of the molecular mechanisms for the biosynthesis of protein.