
PRESS RELEASE
05.12.2008
CONTACT:
For more information,
please contact Anita Martin, Ohio University
Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine assistant director of
communication, at (740) 593-2199.
OU-HCOM professor
earns honorary degree
Indiana University of Pennsylvania awards an
honorary Ph.D. to John Kopchick, renowned researcher
at the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine
Athens, OH—John Kopchick, Ph.D., Goll-Ohio
professor of molecular and cellular biology,
received an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from
Indiana University of Pennsylvania, where he
completed both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees.
The honorary degree was awarded at the university’s
May 10 graduation ceremony, where he also served as
the keynote speaker at their commencement ceremony.
Since 1987, Kopchick has held the Milton and
Lawrence H. Goll Eminent Scholar Professorship in
Molecular and Cellular Biology. He directs the
Growth/Obesity/Diabetes Section of the Edison
Biotechnology Institute at Ohio University and is a
professor in the Biomedical Sciences department in
the university’s Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine.
In 1989, Kopchick and his group were the first to
discover and characterize the molecular aspects of
growth hormone antagonists, an accomplishment for
which he and Ohio University were awarded several
U.S. and European patents. He was instrumental in
founding a company, Sensus, which applied his
laboratory discovery to development of a drug that
has been evaluated in clinical trials for acromegaly,
a chronic disease caused by excessive secretion of
growth hormone by a pituitary adenoma. The drug,
Somavert, has been approved for use in the U.S. and
in Europe and is being marketed by Pfizer. Somavert
also is expected to be useful in treating diabetic
retinopathy and nephropathy as well as breast and
other types of cancer.
Kopchick has been involved in the start-up of two
additional biotechnology companies. The latest,
DiAthegen, focuses on the discovery of diagnostics,
therapeutics, and therapeutic targets in the obesity
and diabetes field.
A Punxsutawney native, Kopchick earned both his
bachelor’s degree in Biology and master’s degree in
Biology and Chemistry from IUP. In 1975, he enrolled
in the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences,
University of Texas System Cancer Center, where he
earned his Ph.D.
After completing his Ph.D., Kopchick continued
research training as a postdoctoral fellow at the
Roche Institute of Molecular Biology and then spent
almost five years at Merck Sharp and Dohme Research
Laboratories, for which he developed a system built
around cloning and expression of growth hormone
genes.
Kopchick has published hundreds of scientific
articles and abstracts in the area of growth,
obesity, and diabetes. Twelve patents have been
granted based on his work with several more pending.
He has served on the editorial boards of several
journals, including the Journal of Biological
Chemistry, Endocrinology, and Molecular
Endocrinology, and currently serves on the editorial
board of GH and IGF-1 Research and Endocrinology.
He is also a member of the Growth Hormone Research
Society Council.
- 30 -
The mission of Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine is innovative
learning, focused research and compassionate care
for Ohio and beyond. Each year more than 100
osteopathic physicians graduate from OU-HCOM, Ohio’s
only college of osteopathic medicine. Fifty-four
percent of OU-HCOM alumni practice in primary care
fields, and more than 60 percent of its graduates
remain in Ohio, where they are more likely to
practice in rural and other physician-shortage
areas. |