Avram Hershko (Hebrew: אברהם הרשקו, born Herskó Ferenc, 31 December 1937) is an Israeli biochemist.
Additional recommended knowledge
Born in Karcag, Hungary, emigrated to Israel in 1950. Received his M.D. in 1965 and his Ph. D in 1969 from the Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel. He is currently a Distinguished Professor at the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine at the Technion in Haifa.
In 2000 he received the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research. Along with Aaron Ciechanover and Irwin Rose, he was awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway has a critical role in maintaining the homeostasis of cells and is believed to be involved in the development and progression of diseases such as: cancer, muscular and neurological diseases, immune and inflammatory responses.
Honors and awards
- 1987 - Weizmann Prize for Sciences (Israel)
- 1994 - Israel Prize in Biochemistry
- 1999 - Gairdner International Award Canada (with A. Varshavsky)
- 2000 - Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research (with A. Ciechanover and A. Varshavsky).
- 2001 - Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University
- 2001 - Wolf Prize in Medicine, Jerusalem
- 2003 - Foreign Associate, National Academy of Sciences, USA
- 2004 - Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Publications
- Hershko, A., Ciechanover, A., Heller, H., Haas, A.L., and Rose I.A. (1980) "Proposed role of ATP in protein breakdown: Conjugation of proteins with multiple chains of the polypeptide of ATP-dependent proteolysis". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77, 1783-1786.
- Hershko, A., Heller, H., Elias, S. and Ciechanover, A. (1983) Components of ubiquitin-protein ligase system: resolution, affinity purification and role in protein breakdown. J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8206-8214.
- Hershko, A., Leshinsky, E., Ganoth, D. and Heller, H. (1984) ATP-dependent degradation of ubiquitin-protein conjugates. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 1619-1623.
- Hershko, A., Heller, H., Eytan, E. and Reiss, Y. (1986) The protein substrate binding site of the ubiquitin-protein ligase system. J. Biol. Chem. 261, 11992-11999.
- Ganoth, D., Leshinsky, E., Eytan, E., and Hershko, A. (1988) A multicomponent system that degrades proteins conjugated to ubiquitin. Resolution of components and evidence for ATP-dependent complex formation. J. Biol. Chem. 263, 12412-1241.
- Sudakin, V., Ganoth, D., Dahan, A., Heller, H., Hershko, J., Luca, F.C., Ruderman, J.V. and Hershko, A. (1995). The cyclosome, a large complex containing cyclin-selective ubiquitin ligase activity, targets cyclins for destruction at the end of mitosis. Mol. Biol. Cell 6, 185-198.
Wolf Prize in Medicine Laureates |
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George Snell / Jean Dausset / Jon J. van Rood (1978) •
Roger Sperry / Arvid Carlsson / Oleh Hornykiewicz (1979) •
César Milstein / Leo Sachs / James L. Gowans (1980) •
Barbara McClintock / Stanley Norman Cohen (1981) •
Jean-Pierre Changeux / Solomon H. Snyder / James W. Black (1982) •
Donald F. Steiner (1984) •
Osamu Hayaishi (1986) •
Pedro Cuatrecasas / Meir Wilchek (1987) •
Henri G. Hers / Elizabeth F. Neufeld (1988) •
John Gurdon / Edward B. Lewis (1989) •
Maclyn McCarty (1990) •
Seymour Benzer (1991) •
Judah Folkman (1992) •
Michael Berridge / Yasutomi Nishizuka (1994) •
Stanley B. Prusiner (1995) •
Mary F. Lyon (1997) •
Michael Sela / Ruth Arnon (1998) •
Eric Kandel (1999) •
Avram Hershko / Alexander Varshavsky (2001) •
Ralph L. Brinster / Mario Capecchi / Oliver Smithies (2002) •
Robert Weinberg / Roger Y. Tsien (2004) •
Alexander Levitzki / Anthony R. Hunter / Anthony Pawson (2005)
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