RSRT Advisor, Huda Zoghbi, Receives 2009 Vilcek Prize for Biomedical Science
, Rett Syndrome Research Trust Blog
The trustees, staff and volunteers of RSRT congratulate Dr. Huda Zoghbi on receiving the 2009 Vilcek Prize in Biomedical Science. The Vilcek Foundation was established in 2000 by Czechoslovakian immigrants Jan and Marica Vilcek to raise public awareness of the contributions of immigrants to the sciences, arts and culture in the United States. Dr. Zoghbi, a world renowned physician-scientist, was selected for this honor for her seminal contributions to neuroscience and genetics, including her discovery, a decade ago, that mutations in MECP2 cause Rett Syndrome.
The Vilcek Foundation celebrates the spirit of immigrants and their will to succeed in a new country, sometimes against all odds. Dr. Zoghbi arrived in the US in 1975, escaping war-torn Beirut where she had been attending medical school. She had intended to stay for only a few months, but her parents convinced her to finish medical school in the US after her brother was injured by shrapnel.
Dr. Zoghbi found her way to Baylor College of Medicine where, as a neurology fellow, she saw her first patient with Rett Syndrome. She put aside her clinical practice to focus on research. After 16 years of perseverance, the Zoghbi lab succeeded in identifying the mutated gene responsible for Rett Syndrome. During the past 10 years I have witnessed Rett Syndrome go from unknown entity to high-profile disorder. This transformation is due, in large part, to the efforts of Dr. Zoghbi, who has consistently brought awareness of this disorder to the scientific community.
As the mother of a child with Rett Syndrome I am deeply grateful for Dr. Zoghbi’s patience and tenacity as well as her skill. It has been my pleasure and privilege over the last decade to have worked closely with and learned so much from Dr. Zoghbi. RSRT is honored to support her research and to count her as a key advisor. As I watched her video interview on the Vilcek Foundation website Dr. Zoghbi was asked “What does your future hold?” I was not surprised by her answer: “There is one more thing I’d like to do…make a patient better.”
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Congratulations to Ukrainian-born artist Irina Danilova! Her new-media works are the first to appear in our brand-new digital art space, the dARTboard. Click on by and see for yourself.
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2012 Vilcek Prizes
We applaud the recipients of the seventh annual Vilcek Prizes: Carlos Bustamante, PhD, winner of the Vilcek Prize for Biomedical Science, and Mikhail Baryshnikov, winner of the Vilcek Prize for Dance. We salute, too, Creative Promise Prize winners, Alice Ting, PhD, for Biomedical Science, and Michel Kouakou, for Dance.
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