Niall Byrne
+61 (3) 5253-1391
niall@scienceinpublic.com.au
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Ms. Alyson O'Mahoney
(914) 241-0086 ext. 13
aomahoney@robinleedyassociates.com
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Bernetia Akin
340-775-8035
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| Online Newsroom: |
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
June 28, 2007, New York, New York -- Over the last forty years, Shigetada Nakanishi has unraveled many of the molecular secrets that underpin the function of the human nervous system. His work has created new tools for researchers, and new drug targets for pharmacologists.
A full understanding of the workings of the human brain is still decades or more away. But Shigetada Nakanishi’s work is bringing it closer. He is an unusual researcher who has both created sophisticated tools to help us investigate the brain, and used these tools to make remarkable discoveries about the molecular processes used throughout the nervous system: our senses, movement control, cognition, learning, memory and much more.
Nakanishi’s achievements include:
- Expressing genes in frog eggs to find new genes and proteins associated with brain function
- Using this technique to identify receptors in the membranes of neurons that trigger the biochemical steps that lead to learning, memory and vision
- Understanding how some of these proteins act in the “electrical” circuits formed between neurons.
"Shigetada
Nakanishi is laying the foundations for us to understand how our brains work –
from the molecular level through to the complex interactions between networks
of neurons," says Peter Gruber, Chairman of the Peter and Patricia Gruber
Foundation.
The
Neuroscience Prize honors leading scientists for distinguished contributions in
the fields of the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nervous system. The
Foundation's other international prizes are in Cosmology, Genetics, Justice,
and Women's Rights.
Nominations
for the 2008 prizes are now open and close on December 31, 2007.
A profile of Nakanishi, photos,
background information and nomination details for 2008 are available online at www.gruberprizes.org.
In Australia: Niall Byrne, +61 (3) 5253-1391, niall@scienceinpublic.com.au
In the USA: Alyson O'Mahoney +1 (914) 241-0086 ext. 13, aomahoney@robinleedyassociates.com
Shigetada Nakanishi can be contacted for interview in Japan on +81 (6) 6872
4810, snakanis@obi.or.jp
The official citation reads:
The
Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation proudly presents the 2007 Neuroscience
Prize to Shigetada Nakanishi who developed tools that enabled him and others to
probe fundamental molecular mechanisms of nervous system function. By expressing genes in frog oocytes, he
discovered new genes of the nervous system and identified novel membrane
receptors. Some of these receptors
respond to peptide hormones and others to glutamate, the major excitatory
chemical signal of the brain. These
receptors are critical for many vital processes of the nervous system,
including learning, memory and vision.
More
recently, he has devised and applied elegant techniques to understand in detail
how receptors on neuron membranes act at critical stages in the operation of
synaptic circuits. His work integrates
multiple levels of neuroscience, from molecules to complex neuronal networks.
-
2006: Masao Ito and Roger Nicoll, for
work on the molecular and cellular bases of memory and learning
-
2005: Masakazu
Konishi and Eric Knudsen, for work
on the neural basis of sound localization
-
2004: Seymour Benzer, for applying the tools of
molecular biology and genetics to the fruit fly, drosophila, and linking
individual genes to their behavioral phenotypes
-
Carol A.
Barnes, PhD, University
of Arizona
-
Colin
Blakemore, Professor, Medical Research Council
-
Linda S. Buck, PhD, Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research
Center
-
Sten Grillner,
Professor, Karolinska Institute
-
H. Robert
Horvitz, Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
Donald Price,
Professor, Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine
-
Richard W.
Tsien, Professor, Stanford
University School
of Medicine
The Gruber
Prize Program honors contemporary individuals in the fields of Cosmology,
Genetics, Neuroscience, Justice and Women's Rights, whose groundbreaking work
provides new models that inspire and enable fundamental shifts in knowledge and
culture. The Selection Advisory Boards choose individuals whose contributions
in their respective fields advance our knowledge, potentially have a profound
impact on our lives, and, in the case of the Justice and Women's Rights Prizes,
demonstrate courage and commitment in the face of significant obstacles.
The Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation honors and encourages
educational excellence, social justice and scientific achievements that better
the human condition. For more
information about Foundation guidelines and priorities, please visit www.gruberprizes.org.
For more
information on the Gruber Prizes email media@gruberprizes.org or
contact Bernetia Akin of the Gruber Foundation at +1 (340) 775-8035 or by mail 140 W 57th St Suite 10C New York, NY 10019.
Media materials and additional background information on the
Gruber Prizes can be found at
our online newsroom: www.gruberprizes.org/Press.php