| UCLA
Physiologist Elected to Prestigious British
Royal Society
Date:
May 27, 2005
Contact: Elaine Schmidt ( eschmidt@mednet.ucla.edu
)
Phone: 310-794-2272
Ernest
Wright (Bel Air), professor of physiology
and Melinkoff Professor in Medicine at the
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, has
been named a 2005 Fellow to the Royal Society,
an honor considered one of the highest accolades
a scientist can achieve next to the Nobel
Prize.
Born
in Belfast, Ireland, Wright joined the faculty
of the medical school in 1967, and was tapped
to chair the physiology department in 1987.
His
research focuses on the structure, function
and genetics of transport proteins, which
act as gatekeepers for the body by carrying
essential molecules in and out of cells. In
2003, his research team identified a new protein
that senses changes in glucose, the blood
sugar that fuels body function. The UCLA discovery
could lead to the development of new drugs
to control diabetes and obesity.
In
his 38-year tenure at UCLA, Wright has mentored
more than 40 postdoctoral fellows and graduate
students. During his career, he received the
Senator Jacob K. Javits Neuroscience Investigator
Award from the National Institutes of Health
from 1985 to 1992, and was named the Walter
B. Cannon Distinguished Lecturer by the American
Physiological Society in 1989, the G.W. Harris
Lecturer by the British Physiological Society
in 1990 and a Fellow of the Biophysical Society
in 2005.
He
has served on the editorial boards for several
physiology journals, consults for the National
Institutes of Health, and is a scientific
advisor to the Eli and Edythe L. Broad Medical
Foundation in Los Angeles.
Wright
earned his doctorate degrees in physiology
from London University and Sheffield University
in England, and conducted his research fellowship
at Harvard University in Boston. He met his
wife, psychologist Brenda Keys, while attending
high school in Coventry, England. He grew
up in Magheramore, Ireland, and attended Larne
Grammar School in Ulster.
The
Royal Society is the world's oldest scientific
academy in continuous existence, and has been
at the forefront of research since its foundation
in 1660. Each year, the British society applies
a rigorous peer review process to elect a
maximum of 44 new fellows and six foreign
members who are citizens of the United Kingdom,
other Commonwealth countries or Ireland.
The
lifetime honor pays tribute to the society's
most distinguished members who have demonstrated
excellence in research and made a substantial
contribution to advancing understanding in
their field of science, medicine, engineering
or mathematics.
More
than 65 Nobel Laureates currently number among
the organization's 1,300 fellows and foreign
members. Society members include Isaac Newton,
Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Dorothy Hodgkin,
Francis Crick, James Watson and Stephen Hawking.
For
more information about the Royal Society and
the complete list of 2005 fellows, see http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/page.asp?id=2210.
Source:
http://newsroom.ucla.edu.
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