GlaxoSmithKline Prize

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Under the name Royal Society GlaxoSmithKline Prize and Lecture , the Royal Society presented an award for outstanding work in the previous ten years in the field of medicine or dentistry . The recipient was not subject to any restrictions regarding his or her nationality. The laureate was asked to give a lecture at the Royal Society .

The award was originally donated by the Wellcome Foundation , a pharmaceutical company that merged with Glaxo to form Glaxo Wellcome in 1996 , which in turn was merged into GlaxoSmithKline in 2000 . GlaxoSmithKline has sponsored the award since 2002, which consisted of a gold medal and prize money of £ 2500 . The award was stopped in 2016.

Award winners

  • 2016: Andrew Hattersley For his work on genetic and physiological studies of patients with common subtypes of monogenic diabetes revolutionizing treatment for these patients.
  • 2014: Nicholas Lydon For the development of the drug imatinib, a targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that has transformed the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) and is a paradigm for cancer drug discovery.
  • 2012: Adrian Bird For his outstanding contributions in the field of epigenetics, especially DNA methylation and its role in development and disease.
  • 2010: Stephen West In recognition of his pioneering work on the molecular mechanisms of genetic recombination and DNA repair and their relation to tumorigenesis.
  • 2007: Mark Pepys For his excellent work as a clinical scientist who has identified specific proteins as new therapeutic targets and developed novel drugs with potential use in amyloidosis, Alzheimer's disease and cardiovascular disease.
  • 2005: Nicholas White For his outstanding work on the treatment and prevention of serious diseases within the developing world.
  • 2003: Michael Neuberger In recognition of his work on resolving the molecular mechanism of somatic antibody diversification, a key feature of immune response, with consequences reaching far beyond immunology to DNA instability and cancer.
  • 2000: David H. MacLennan In recognition of his work on calcium regulatory proteins, particularly in the understanding of malignant hyperthermia (MH), central core disease (CCD), Brody disease and phospholamban, and applying his knowledge of the gene in MH to develop accurate diagnosis of disease in pigs. In addition to its valuable veterinary application, this work represents a particularly good example of the way in which basic science has been developed to the point at which it is widely applied.
  • 1998: Gillian Bates , Stephen Davies In recognition of their discovery of the cause of Huntington's Disease, a dominantly inherited, late onset, fatal neurodegenerative disease.
  • 1996: Charles Weissmann In recognition of his work on prion diseases which lead to the remarkable advances in understanding the molecular biology of spongiform encephalopathies.
  • 1994: David JP Barker In recognition of his singularly novel and important contributions to our understanding of the causes of a number of the major diseases of later life (cardiovascular disease, obstructive airways disease and diabetes) by demonstrating that their origins may lie in fetal nutrition and in growth in utero and during infancy.
  • 1992: Paul Nurse In recognition of his seminal contributions to the understanding of the molecular basis of regulation of the eukaryotic cycle.
  • 1990: Philippa Marrack , John W. Kappler In recognition of their seminal contributions to T-cell biology, which include the characterization of the T-cell receptor; the demonstration that self-tolerance is caused by clonal elimination in the thymus; and the discovery that bacterial toxins act as 'superantigens'.
  • 1988: Louis M. Kunkel In recognition of his achievement in identifying by novel techniques of reverse genetics the biochemical abnormality responsible for Ducheme / Becker muscular dystrophy as being the absence of a previously unknown protein, dystrophin.
  • 1986: Donald Metcalf , Leo Sachs In recognition of their discovery of factors which regulate growth and differentiation in normal and leukaemic blood-forming tissue.
  • 1984: Raymond Andrew , James MS Hutchison , John Mallard , Peter Mansfield In recognition of their development of NMR imaging as a diagnostic tool in medicine.
  • 1982: Hans Walter Kosterlitz In recognition of his studies of the action of opiates and the discovery of the enkephalins.
  • 1980: César Milstein In recognition of his pioneering the production of monoclonal antibodies from hybrid cell lines and initiating their application worldwide in many fields of biology and medicine.

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