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Kopchick awarded British
Society for Endocrinology’s
Transatlantic Medal

In 1989, a team of researchers led by
Ohio University’s
John Kopchick,
Ph.D,
discovered a compound that blocks the
normal action
of growth hormone. It was this finding
that led to the development of a
globally marketed drug
as well as dozens of collaborations
between Kopchick and endocrinologists
around the world.
Today that scientific breakthrough ― and
22 years of groundbreaking research
since then ― have produced something
else for Kopchick: international
recognition from the
British
Society
for Endocrinology. The group, one of the world’s most
prestigious endocrine societies, awarded
him its Transatlantic Medal earlier this
year. The medal is given annually to a
North American who has made significant
contributions to the discipline that
focuses on hormones.
“His story is a truly inspirational
example of translational medicine ― the
application of basic science discovery
through to a new clinical drug that is
improving the lives of many patients,”
said Paul Stewart, M.D., dean of
medicine at the United Kingdom’s
University of Birmingham and a supporter
of Kopchick’s nomination for the award.
“Very few individuals achieve such
rewards in their scientific careers.”
Kopchick,
Goll Ohio Professor of Molecular Biology
in the
Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine
and
Edison Biotechnology Institute,
said he was deeply honored to receive
the medal. He joins a list of respected
winners of the award since its inception
in 1979, when the society created it as
a way to promote connections between
endocrinologists in North America and
the United Kingdom.
In April Kopchick traveled to the
society’s annual conference in
Birmingham, England, to receive the
award and to give a plenary lecture in
its honor.
His talk described how he and his
colleagues developed transgenic mice
that have either an abundance or lack of
growth hormone, a substance produced by
the pituitary gland that promotes normal
body growth and development.
Working with the
genetically modified animals, Kopchick
made the seminal discovery that led to
the development of Somavert®,
the
commercially successful clinical drug launched in
2003. The medicine is used to treat
acromegaly, a medical condition that
causes abnormal growth of organs and
bones in about 40,000 adults worldwide.
That initial finding also paved
the way for the scientist’s numerous
other research projects, including those
related to
cancer
treatment,
obesity, insulin resistance, diabetes,
aging and even performance-enhancing
drugs in athletes.
Kopchick’s influence in
the field of endocrinology goes beyond
his own research using the mice as well.
Scientists and clinicians around the
globe use the animals for endocrinology
studies on issues such as dwarfism or
the effect of growth hormone on muscle
or bone. A Birmingham scientist that
Kopchick met at the UK conference,
Stuart Morgan, Ph.D., is even set to
visit OHIO in September to work with
them for a month.
“Our mouse models are of
two types: ones that have too little
growth hormone ― they’re dwarf ― or
others that have too much growth
hormone, and they’re giant,” Kopchick
explained. “But it’s not just the
outward phenotype, the small dwarf or
the large giant, but the consequences of
that, the physiology behind it that
people want to study.”
It’s this dedication to continued
research that makes Kopchick the
world-leading scientist that he is, said
Stewart, himself a well-known
endocrinologist with more than 250
original research papers to his name.
“In typical fashion, John is far from
complacent and continues to evaluate the
role of growth hormone and metabolic
signals in the ageing process,” Stewart
said, emphasizing the honor of receiving
Transatlantic Medal. “It is awarded only
to the very best.” |