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Renowned Stanford Microbe Hunter Stanley Falkow to Receive a 2008 Lasker Award.


STANFORD, Calif. -- Stanley Falkow Stanley Falkow, PhD, is microbiologist and a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University School of Medicine.[1] He is sometimes referred to as the father of molecular microbial pathogenesis, which is the study of how infectious microbes and host cells  has spent his life studying how bacteria cause human disease. But ask him whose side he's on, and he's likely to pause. Or maybe not. Actually, it's been pretty clear all along -- as evidenced by an experiment in graduate school that required him to feed hapless bacteria to a hungry slime mold slime mold or slime fungus, a heterotrophic organism once regarded as a fungus but later classified with the Protista. In a recent system of classification based on analysis of nucleic acid (genetic material) sequences, slime molds have been .

"I felt like a traitor," recalled Falkow, PhD, the Robert W. and Vivian K. Cahill Professor in Cancer Research at the Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine is affiliated with Stanford University and is located at Stanford University Medical Center in Stanford, California, adjacent to Palo Alto and Menlo Park. . He was supposed to be learning more about the mold. Instead, he trained his microscope on the lucky bacterial survivors, exhibiting an affinity for microbes that has lasted more than 50 years and spawned the careers of nearly 100 students, postdocs and fellows.

The breadth and depth of Falkow's career is being recognized with the 2008 Lasker-Koshland Award for Special Achievement in Medical Science. Sometimes referred to as "America's Nobels," the Lasker Awards are this country's most distinguished honor for researchers in basic and clinical medical sciences. The Special Achievement award, which has been renamed in honor of the late biochemist Daniel Koshland Jr., is given only once every two years to commemorate a life of scientific contribution and service. The awards will be announced Sept. 13 by the Lasker Foundation and then officially presented at a ceremony Sept. 26 in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
. Falkow's award carries a cash prize of $300,000.

Falkow's colleagues, collaborators and students couldn't be happier about the recognition.

"Dr. Stanley Falkow is one of the most remarkable and respected scientists of our time," said Stanford medical school Dean, Philip Pizzo, MD. "His elegant research contributions to the field of bacterial pathogenesis, which he fathered, have been enhanced by his incredible leadership as a teacher and mentor for a generation of physicians and scientists worldwide."

"There's an irreverent, playful joyfulness to the way Stanley does science," said David Relman, MD, a Stanford professor of infectious disease Infectious disease

A pathological condition spread among biological species. Infectious diseases, although varied in their effects, are always associated with viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, multicellular parasites and aberrant proteins known as prions.
 and of microbiology and immunology, who was a postdoctoral scholar in Falkow's lab in the late '80s. "Everyone who meets him feels like they have a personal connection."

Falkow's fascination with his chosen field began when, at about 11 years old, he happened upon Paul de Kruif's Microbe microbe /mi·crobe/ (mi´krob) a microorganism, especially a pathogenic one such as a bacterium, protozoan, or fungus.micro´bialmicro´bic

mi·crobe
n.
 Hunters -- a classic story dramatizing the earliest discoveries of micro-organisms by Leeuwenhoek, Koch, Pasteur and others -- in his local library in Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States
Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches.
. After reading the book, he was hooked. He arranged a deal with a nearby toy store A toy store, or toy shop, is a retail business specializing in the services of selling toys. No longer held to the limitations of the brick and mortar outlet, the toy store has successfully created a presence within the e-commerce industry.  to work in exchange for a small microscope, and promptly became a member of what was then a relatively small group of bacterial paparazzi pa·pa·raz·zo  
n. pl. pa·pa·raz·zi
A freelance photographer who doggedly pursues celebrities to take candid pictures for sale to magazines and newspapers.
.

Although Falkow, now 74, went on to experience most of the transformative technological breakthroughs in science, from ultracentrifugation ultracentrifugation /ul·tra·cen·trif·u·ga·tion/ (ul?trah-sen-trif?u-ga´shun) subjection of material to an exceedingly high centrifugal force, which will separate and sediment the molecules of a substance.  to DNA sequencing DNA sequencing

The determination of the sequence of nucleotides in a sample of DNA.
 to microarrays, he still has a soft spot for microscopy. He's most well-known for his work on extrachromosomal elements called plasmids and their role in antibiotic resistance antibiotic resistance,
n the ability of certain strains of microorganisms to develop resistance to antibiotics.

antibiotic resistance 
 and pathogenicity in humans and animals, but he's continued throughout his career to explore the microbe's-eye view that can only be afforded by getting down to their level.

In particular, he's fond of promoting the idea that many of the adverse effects of microbial microbial

pertaining to or emanating from a microbe.


microbial digestion
the breakdown of organic material, especially feedstuffs, by microbial organisms.
 infection are the fault of the host as much as the bacteria. "Disease is a distraction that keeps us from understanding the biology of the relationship between the two organisms," said Falkow, who is also a professor of microbiology and immunology. "I never met a microbe I didn't like."

His enthusiasm is hard to resist. One of his most recent postdoctoral students, Manuel Amieva, MD, PhD, credits Falkow with turning him on to the study of infectious disease. "Stanley is very funny and witty, and he always has a different perspective or twist on things," said Amieva. "It was very refreshing to hear him describe infectious disease from the point of view of the microbe. For the first time, I began to think of humans as basically just a landscape for microbes to inhabit."

"He's given more to science than just stellar ideas and new insights," added Relman. "His legacy includes a community of over 100 trainees who view each other as family and who have learned a unique way of looking at the world and of doing science."

Amieva, then a medical student and now an assistant professor of pediatrics and of infectious disease at Stanford, and others in the Falkow lab were fair game for Falkow's charm. But the inveterate inveterate /in·vet·er·ate/ (-vet´er-at) confirmed and chronic; long-established and difficult to cure.

in·vet·er·ate
adj.
1. Firmly and long established; deep-rooted.

2.
 fisherman with the easy grin tends to net followers from an even larger pool.

"Although we were drawn together because of a mutual love of trout fishing," said Marshall Bloom Marshall Bloom cofounded Liberation News Service (LNS) with Ray Mungo in 1967. LNS split off from College Press Service (CPS) in a political dispute. The inaugural issue of the LNS, a mimeographed news packet, was sent during the Sept. 1967 March on the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. , MD, who has known Falkow for more than 20 years, "he has since become a devoted member of my family. My two sons call him zeyde, the Yiddish word for grandfather, and I am confident that Stanley's wonderful personality was a major influence on their love of science and their decisions to pursue biomedical bi·o·med·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to biomedicine.

2. Of, relating to, or involving biological, medical, and physical sciences.
 careers of their own."

Bloom is the associate director of Rocky Mountain Laboratories in Hamilton, Mont., a division of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. Word is that Falkow was lured to become a part-time resident of the Bitterroot Valley because of the area's excellent fly fishing after first visiting the lab in 1984. He'll tell you it was the opportunity to pursue his first love -- the microscopic examination of the human pathogens studied at the labs.

Falkow's unassuming nature may have been shaped in part by his mother, now 98 years old. When informed of her son's Lasker Award she responded, as she has in the past, "Well, Stanley, better you than some stranger I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
."

She's had a lot of opportunities to hone her delivery: Falkow's previous honors include the 2000 Robert-Koch Award from the Robert-Koch Foundation in Germany, considered one of the most prestigious awards in the field of microbiology; an election to the Institute of Medicine, an honorary society whose members are selected by their peers for making major contributions to health, medicine or related fields; membership in the National Academy of Sciences and the Royal Society; and a former presidency of the American Society of Microbiology.

In some ways, Falkow's career can be described as a series of fortunate coincidences. He learned medical bacteriology during summers off as an undergraduate at the University of Maine "UMO" redirects here, but this abbreviation is also used informally to mean the Mozilla Add-ons website, formerly Mozilla Update

Should not be confused with Université du Maine, in Le Mans, France
The University of Maine
 by working in a laboratory at Newport Hospital in Rhode Island. He met sick patients by rounding with the doctors, identified patients' bacterial infections by culturing them on plates, and even helped with autopsies when treatment was unsuccessful. The experience filled him with a lasting desire to understand why some bacteria made people sick, when others coexist with us peacefully.

When Falkow pursued this study as a graduate student in the early 1960s, first at the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  and next at Brown University, and then as an independent researcher at Georgetown University, he learned the biochemical and microbiological techniques necessary to deduce how bacteria transmit antibiotic resistance to one another by sharing circular extrachromosomal elements called plasmids. In particular, he found that some bacteria were resistant to antibiotics to which they had never been exposed, which at first confounded the researchers.

"Bacteria are smart, but they're not that smart," said Falkow, who subsequently discovered that bacteria gained their resistance by sharing their genes much more promiscuously then had been thought possible.

Although few scientists at the time were skilled in both bacteriology bacteriology

Study of bacteria. Modern understanding of bacterial forms dates from Ferdinand Cohn's classifications. Other researchers, such as Louis Pasteur, established the connection between bacteria and fermentation and disease.
 and microbiology, his colleagues did not support his drive to determine why some bacteria are more dangerous to humans than others.

"At the time, there was a kind of euphoric feeling that infectious disease had been mostly conquered," said Falkow, "so I was encouraged to abandon my focus on pathogenicity." As a result, Falkow switched gears to focus on understanding plasmids that confer antibiotic resistance, called R factors. His research came full circle, however, when learned that some bacteria carry plasmids encoding toxins that can wreak havoc on their hapless hosts. When Falkow arrived at Stanford in 1981, he set aside his study of plasmids to concentrate fulltime on how organisms as diverse as cholera, plague and whooping cough whooping cough or pertussis, highly communicable infectious disease caused by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis. The early or catarrhal stage of whooping cough is manifested by the usual symptoms of an upper respiratory infection with  cause disease in humans.

In addition to experiencing a fortuitous intersection of bacteriology and molecular biology molecular biology, scientific study of the molecular basis of life processes, including cellular respiration, excretion, and reproduction. The term molecular biology was coined in 1938 by Warren Weaver, then director of the natural sciences program at the Rockefeller , of plasmids and pathogenicity, Falkow participated in the first discussion of recombinant DNA recombinant DNA
n.
Genetically engineered DNA prepared by transplanting or splicing one or more segments of DNA into the chromosomes of an organism from a different species. Such DNA becomes part of the host's genetic makeup and is replicated.
, or the splicing splicing /splic·ing/ (spli´sing)
1. the attachment of individual DNA molecules to each other, as in the production of chimeric genes.

2. RNA s.
 together of genes from different organisms.

"As soon as we proposed the idea, it was immediately clear that it would work," said Falkow, who provided one of the plasmids used in the first recombination recombination, process of "shuffling" of genes by which new combinations can be generated. In recombination through sexual reproduction, the offspring's complete set of genes differs from that of either parent, being rather a combination of genes from both parents.  experiments. "All great experiments in science are simple. When we hear of one, we all say, 'Why didn't I think of that?'"

Such creativity and free thinking in science resulted primarily from an influx of funding for research in response to the Soviet Union's Sputnik program, according to Falkow. "In the '50s and '60s, the philosophy was to fund the best and the brightest, no matter what," he said. "The idea was that creativity was very important and should be encouraged, and that paid off in the explosion of genomic research findings in the '90s."

In contrast, the current structure of government funding allows little leeway for trial and error, Falkow believes. "Students today talk about proving a hypothesis, rather than testing it," he said. "It's a subtle, but very real difference. But very creative people often don't really follow the same drum. There may be an argument for going from A to B to C to D, but some people go directly from A to F. There has to be room for both of them."

Mentoring students and fostering their creativity is something Falkow takes seriously. He insists that the relationship is a learned skill. "You listen carefully to a student and let them finish talking it out. And then you tell them to do what they said they wanted to do. And then they think you are very wise. I might ask them, 'How long are you going to do this?' if I'm not convinced, but I would let them do it."

"He is incredibly generous," added Amieva. "He never keeps anything for his own research when his students leave to start their own careers. He's never afraid of running out of new ideas."

He's also willing to speak out. "I got to get to know Stanley in 1977 when I was the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration," said Donald Kennedy, PhD, who went on to serve as the president of Stanford University and is now the Bing Professor of Environmental Science, emeritus. "Stanley, who was on an advisory committee for the agency, was very concerned about the overuse overuse Health care The common use of a particular intervention even when the benefits of the intervention don't justify the potential harm or cost–eg, prescribing antibiotics for a probable viral URI. Cf Misuse, Underuse.  of antibiotics in animal feed. I needed a world-class science expert to help with this issue, and I was very fortunate to find Stanley."

Not only did Falkow testify before Congress in an effort to ban the practice, he also argued against a proposal in 2003 to censor the publication of scientific information, such as the sequence of the polio virus, that could possibly be used for bioterrorism.

"My wife and I have become great friends with Stanley and Lucy," said Kennedy. Falkow is married to Lucy Tompkins, PhD, a professor of infectious diseases and of microbiology and immunology at Stanford. "He has a wonderful, and sometimes outrageous, sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
sense of humour, humor, humour
."

Since closing his lab in 2006, Falkow's life has assumed an only slightly more relaxed pace. In addition to fishing, he's learned to pilot small aircraft. Asked what he looks forward to, he responds promptly, thinking of a missed opportunity that morning. "Flying." But, as might be expected, the joy of both pastimes stems as much from the process as from the outcome. Bloom, who takes extended fishing trips with Falkow, describes a typical excursion. "Well, I'm right-handed, and Stanley is left-handed. So he catches all the fish looking one way, and I catch the ones looking the other way. But neither one of us catch all that many."

This willingness to accept what comes is another Falkow hallmark. "One of the difficulties we deal with is the attitude that, if you pour enough money into a project, you can come up with a vaccine or a treatment," said Falkow. "I think that's not true. You have to understand the fundamental biology behind the question. Finding a biological law that doesn't have an exception or a variation is very, very difficult. And the idea that humans can come up with something that is better than what happens naturally is extremely daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
. Very often, people can't."

But they can have fun trying. When Falkow told his mother he wanted to be a bacteriologist bacteriologist

an expert in the study of bacteria and the diseases they cause.
, she wondered, "A man can make a living doing this?"

Indeed he can.

Stanford University Medical Center Stanford University Medical Center (Stanford Hospital & Clinics) is one of four hospitals affiliated with Stanford University and Stanford University School of Medicine, along with the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Palo Alto, and Santa  integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions -- Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Lucile Packard Children's Hospital (LPCH) is a hospital located on the Stanford University campus in Palo Alto, California. It is staffed by over 650 physicians and 4,750 staff and volunteers.  at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu.

(NOTE TO REPORTERS: High-resolution photos of Stanley Falkow are available for download at: http://med.stanford.edu/news_releases/2008/download/)
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