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UC Chemistry and the Cincinnati Section of the American Chemical Society are pleased to annouce the
2009 Oesper Award Winner

Professor Susan Lindquist Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Friday, October 30, 2009
Susan Lindquist received her PhD in Biology from Harvard in 1976 and was a postdoctoral fellow of the American Cancer Society. She is a member, and former Director, of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. She is also a Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Lindquist is an expert in protein folding, studying the biological phenomena that influence the different shapes that proteins take. Her groundbreaking work has shown how changes in protein conformation affect processes such as stress tolerance, neurodegenerative disease and heredity, and has highlighted the importance of molecular chaperones, proteins whose function is to assist other proteins in achieving proper folding. Her group has pioneered the use of yeast as a discovery platform for new chemical and genetic therapies for neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases. She has used a yeast model that recapitulates many of the cell biological consequences of Parkinson’s disease to discover several genes that may underlie an important mechanism of neurodegeneration in that condition.
Previously she was the Albert D. Lasker Professor in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Chicago. She was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1997 and the Institute of Medicine in 2006. Lindquist’s honors also include the Dickson Prize in Medicine, the Sigma Xi William Procter Prize for Scientific Achievement, the Centennial Medal of the Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The Otto-Warburg Prize, The Genetics Society of America Medal, and the FASEB Excellence in Science Award. Dr. Lindquist has mentored many highly successful young scientists and has been particularly active in her efforts to support talented young women scientists.
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