Telomere Expert Greider Shares Germany's Largest
Scientific Prize

Carol Greider
Photo by Will Kirk / HIPS
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By Audrey Huang Johns Hopkins Medicine
Carol Greider, the Daniel Nathans Professor and
Director of Molecular
Biology and Genetics at
the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, will share Germany's
largest scientific prize, the 100,000 euro
(about $140,000) 2009 Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter
Prize, with Elizabeth Blackburn, of the
University of California, San Francisco for their
"discovery of telomeres and telomerase and the
elucidation of their significance for cell division and
cell aging."
"This is a great honor, and I am thrilled to share it
with Liz," said Greider, who discovered the
chromosome-capping enzyme telomerase while a graduate
student with Blackburn at the University of
California, Berkeley in 1984. "This is just one of many
examples of exciting research that comes from
curiosity-driven research. We had no idea when we
discovered it that telomeres would have an
important link to degenerative disease and cancer."
The Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize is
among the most prestigious international
awards granted in the Federal Republic of Germany in the
field of medicine. The award ceremony will
take place on March 14, the birthday of Paul Ehrlich
(1854-1915), in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt.
Chromosome ends are protected by special caps known as
telomeres. Each time a cell divides,
telomeres shorten by a tiny bit until they reach a
critically short length, a process that triggers the
cell to stop dividing. The telomerase enzyme that Greider
and Blackburn discovered can prevent
telomere shortening at each cell division by adding on DNA
building blocks to each chromosome end.
Telomerase normally is found only in cells of the human
body that need to renew themselves, such as
blood and skin cells. Telomerase also has been found in
cancer cells and has been shown to be required
for long-term cancer cell growth.
Greider, who was born in San Diego and grew up in
Davis, Calif., studied biology at the University
of California, Santa Barbara and completed her doctorate at
Berkeley in 1987. She came to the Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine in 1993 and has held her present
position since 2003. Greider has
received numerous honors and scientific awards for her
work, including the 2006 Albert Lasker Award
for Basic Medical Research, also shared with Blackburn.
The Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize is
awarded to scientists in recognition of their
special achievements in Ehrlich's areas of research,
especially immunology, cancer research,
hematology, microbiology and chemotherapy. The prize has
been awarded since 1952 and is financed
by donations from the Federal Ministry of Health, companies
and the German Association of
Research-Based Pharmaceutical Companies.

Related Web sites
Carol Greider
Paul Ehrlich Foundation
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