FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
APS Contact
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Newsroom Opens at 12:00 p.m.
Saturday April 28
APS Newsroom
East Registration Area
Washington Convention Center
APS Press Room: (202) 249-4174
Oxford Physiology Professor Earns Walter B.
Cannon Award
‘Life at the Extremes’
author Frances M. Ashcroft delivers ‘Physiology in Perspective’ lecture
Washington – The subject of ion channels might
seem abstract, but these microscopic gates into individual cells can account
for some astonishing phenomena: goats that fall flat on the ground when
startled; pigs that shiver themselves to death; horses that suffer bouts of
paralysis. Each of these conditions was traced to a malfunctioning ion
channel.
Oxford University Physiology Professor Frances M.
Ashcroft, working with Exeter University
Professor Andrew Hattersley, discovered another malady associated with ion
channel malfunction, a rare genetic form of diabetes that strikes children
and is known as permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus.
Their discovery produced
dramatic changes in the lives of children born with the disease. As a result
of their research, these children have been able to switch from daily
insulin injections to a daily pill,
transforming both their lives and that of their parents.
Physiology in perspective
at 120th Annual Meeting in Washington
The American Physiological Society (APS) will
present its highest award, the Walter B. Cannon Award, to Dr. Ashcroft. She
will be the 25th recipient of the Cannon Award, which goes to an
outstanding scientist, and will deliver the Walter B. Cannon Physiology in
Perspective lecture at 5:45 p.m., Saturday, April 28 in Ballroom B of
the Washington Convention Center. The lecture is part of the 120th
annual meeting of the APS, which takes place as part of Experimental
Biology 2007.
Dr. Ashcroft, a fellow of the Royal Society of London, is also
the author of
“Life at the Extremes: The Science of Survival,” a best-selling book
written for a general audience, that examines the science behind a variety
of extreme activities, including mountain climbing and deep sea diving.
She has written two textbooks:
“Insulin: Molecular Biology to Pathology” and
“Ion Channels and Disease.” She has also published more than 200
research articles in scholarly journals.
“Prize pores”
Ion channels -- microscopic protein pores in the cell membrane
that control which ions enter and leave -- are essential for the normal
functioning of all cells. The ability to see, hear, think, speak, and move
arms and legs is due to the activity of ion channels in the nerve cells of
the brain and in the muscle cells of the limbs. When these channels
malfunction, a variety of diseases can result, including diabetes, cystic
fibrosis, epilepsy and sudden cardiac death.
Diabetes is a serious
metabolic disease that is reaching epidemic proportions in Western societies
and is predicted to affect 300 million people worldwide by 2025. The disease
occurs when the body does not make enough insulin for its needs. Dr.
Ashcroft's research has provided insights into how insulin is normally
secreted by the pancreas and what goes wrong with this process in diabetes.
Research on ion channels, which Dr. Ashcroft dubs
“prize pores,” is playing a major role in APS-sponsored sessions at
Experimental Biology this year. At 5:45 p.m., Sunday, April 29, James
D. Stockand of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
will expand on the theme when he gives the Henry Pickering Bowditch Award
lecture “New insight into the regulation of ENaC by small G proteins and
phosphatidylinositides.” The Bowditch Award, the Society’s second highest,
is awarded to a scientist younger than 42 years whose accomplishments are
both original and outstanding.
Interview Opportunities
Available
Members of
the media who wish to schedule an interview with Frances Ashcroft or James
Stockand during the conference should e-mail
Christine Guilfoy or call her, prior to the conference, at (301)
634-7253. During the conference, please call the APS press room at (202)
249-4174. Please
click here for the entire APS program at Experimental Biology 2007,
which is expected to attract 12,000 scientists.
Please
click here for the APS program at Experimental Biology 2007.
Physiology
is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American Physiological Society has been an
integral part of this scientific discovery process since it was established
in 1887.
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