Awards & Winners

Leroy Hood

Date of Birth 10-October-1938
Place of Birth Missoula
(Missoula County, Montana)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Biologist, Physician, Professor
Leroy Hood is an American biologist. He won the 2011 Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize “for automating DNA sequencing that revolutionized biomedicine and forensic science” and the 2003 Lemelson-MIT Prize for inventing "four instruments that have unlocked much of the mystery of human biology" by helping decode the genome. Hood also won the 2002 Kyoto Prize for Advanced Technology, and the 1987 Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research. The inventions developed under his leadership include the automated DNA sequencer and an automated tool for synthesizing DNA. Hood co-founded the Institute for Systems Biology.

Awards by Leroy Hood

Check all the awards nominated and won by Leroy Hood.

2011


National Medal of Science for Biological Sciences
(For pioneering spirit, passion, vision, inventions, and leadership combined with unique cross-disciplinary approaches resulting in entrepreneurial ventures, transformative commercial products, and several new scientific disciplines that have challenged and transformed the fields of biotechnology, genomics, proteomics, personalized medicine, and science education.)

1987


Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
(For his prolific and imaginative studies of somatic recombination in the immune system, detailing in molecular terms the genetics of antibody diversity.)