Canadian, U.S. scientists win $1M Shaw prize for obesity work
Last Updated: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 | 12:09 PM ET
CBC News
A Canadian researcher who helped discover a hormone that has a major impact on obesity is one of two scientists awarded the lucrative Shaw Prize in Life Science and Medicine.
Canadian Douglas Coleman, an emeritus scientist with Jackson Laboratories in Maine, and Jeffrey Friedman of Rockefeller University in New York, won the prize for their work on the hormone leptin, the organizers of the award said Tuesday.
The two researchers, who worked separately, will share a $1 million US payout that goes with the prize, said the Hong Kong-based Shaw Prize Foundation, which administers the award.
The Ontario-born Coleman identified a hormone that governs food intake and body weight while working on mice in the 1970s. From the 1990s and into this decade, Friedman, using gene mapping techniques, isolated that hormone — leptin, finding it was active only in body fat, a surprising and significant finding, given fat cells were not previously known to secrete major hormones.
The identification of the hormone led to research that showed some obese people have mutations to their leptin receptors.
"For those people who are beset with the problem of obesity, this is a most important discovery," Yang Chen-ning, the chairman of the Shaw Prize board, told reporters in Hong Kong.
"This discovery already shows that it is not a matter of willpower that is at the root of the problem of obesity, it is in fact a chemical process."
Coleman's work paved the way for Freidman to isolate the hormone, said the Shaw Prize Foundation.
"The Coleman/Friedman discoveries foster an explosion in our knowledge about how fat cells signal the brain to control energy intake," the foundation said in a release on its website. "Today we know that all normal humans depend on leptin to control their body weight."
Astronomy, mathematics work recognized
The Shaw Prize foundation awards three prizes in the fields of life science and medicine, mathematical sciences, and astronomy annually.
The awards, which were first given out since 2004, seek to recognize those who "have achieved significant breakthrough in academic and scientific research or application and whose work has resulted in a positive and profound impact on mankind," says the Shaw Prize Foundation.
The prize for astronomy was awarded to Chinese-born Frank Chu, a researcher at the University of California in San Diego. A specialist in star formation, he received the award in recognition of his life's work on the subject.
Two researchers, Simon Donaldson, a British professor at Imperial College, London, and Clifford Taubes, a U.S. professor at Harvard University, shared the mathematics prize for their work on three and four-dimensional geometry.
The awards will be presented to the winners at a ceremony in Hong Kong in October.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Air Canada confident it can reach deal with pilots
- Travellers flying Air Canada can keep booking their flights as negotiations continue with a new federally appointed mediator to help resolve an ongoing contract dispute between the airline and its pilots. more »
- Legalize pot, say former B.C. attorneys general
- Four former B.C. attorneys general are joining a coalition of health and justice experts calling for the legalization of marijuana. more »
- Whitney Houston's funeral to be held Saturday
- Pop star Whitney Houston's funeral service will be held Saturday in the New Jersey church where she first showcased her singing talents as a child. more »
- CN blamed for fatal train derailment in Illinois
- CN is being blamed for a 2009 train derailment in Illinois, in which several cars went off the tracks and caught fire, killing one person and injuring seven others. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- New iPad anticipated in March
- The latest version of Apple's iPad tablet will launch in early March, according to blog and media reports this week. more »
- Higgs boson hunt aided by energy boost
- The world's largest particle accelerator is ramping up its beam energy in hopes that scientists will learn definitively this year whether the last undiscovered particle in the Standard Model of Physics exists. more »
- Nortel hit by suspected Chinese cyberattacks for a decade
- Hackers based in China enjoyed widespread access to Nortel's computer network for nearly a decade, according to a report. more »
- U.S. weighs steep nuclear arms cuts
- The Obama administration is weighing options for sharp new cuts to the U.S. nuclear force, including a reduction of up to 80 per cent in the number of deployed weapons, The Associated Press has learned. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Glacier Discovery Walk: Will the visitor centre enhance the view? Feb. 14, 2012 9:22 AM Environment minister Peter Kent has announced the construction of a new Glacier Discovery Walk and visitor centre on the Icefields Parkway in Jasper National Park. It raises the issue of how to balance commercial development in our National Parks against the preservation of the last refuges of wilderness.
Quirks & Quarks
- February 11: Inside the Mind of a Neandertal Feb. 10, 2012 4:01 PM Can we get inside the mind of a species that's been dead for 30,000 years? A new book, How to Think Like a Neanderthal, suggests we can. The authors reconstruct a creature like us in many ways, but with important differences.
Latest Features
- Online surveillance critics accused of supporting child porn
- Whitney Houston's funeral to be held Saturday
- HMCS Corner Brook collision damage extensive
- Online surveillance bill targets child porn: Toews
- Legalize pot, say former B.C. attorneys general
- Mooning Queen proves costly for Australian man
- MacKay says submarine fleet has 'spotty' history
- Man kidnapped at Greyhound station escapes captors
- Stanley Cup rioter seen in brick attack on cop

