Silicon Valley Titans Launch Breakthrough Science Prize at UCSF

Current and Former UCSF Scientists Named Among Recipients of Inaugural Awards

By Jeffrey Norris

Susan Desmond-Hellmann, Arthur Levinson, Mark Zuckerberg, Yuri Milner, Anne Wojcicki sit as a panel during a press conference
From left, UCSF Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann, Apple and Genentech board chairman Arthur D. Levinson, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Russian Internet entrepreneur Yuri Milner and 23andMe.com founder Anne Wojcicki discuss the new Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences during a Feb. 20 press conference on UCSF's Mission Bay campus. Desmond-Hellmann, Milner and Wojcicki are looking up at the crowd gathered for the news conference in the upper levels of Genentech Hall.

One current and three former UCSF scientists are among 11 named as recipients of a major new award aiming at spurring life sciences innovation that’s sponsored by a Russian Internet entrepreneur and Silicon Valley business leaders, including founders of Facebook and Google.

Recipients of the 2013 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences:

  • Cornelia I. Bargmann
    Rockefeller University
    For the genetics of neural circuits and behavior, and synaptic guidepost molecules
  • David Botstein
    Princeton University
    For linkage mapping of Mendelian disease in humans using DNA polymorphisms
  • Lewis C. Cantley
    Weill Cornell Medical College and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
    For the discovery of PI 3-Kinase and its role in cancer metabolism
  • Hans Clevers
    Hubrecht Institute
    For describing the role of Wnt signaling in tissue stem cells and cancer
  • Napoleone Ferrara
    University of California, San Diego
    For discoveries in the mechanisms of angiogenesis that led to therapies for cancer and eye diseases
  • Titia de Lange
    Rockefeller University
    For research on telomeres, illuminating how they protect chromosome ends and their role in genome instability in cancer
  • Eric S. Lander
    Harvard Medical School
    For the discovery of general principles for identifying human disease genes, and enabling their application to medicine through the creation and analysis of genetic, physical and sequence maps of the human genome
  • Charles L. Sawyers
    Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
    For cancer genes and targeted therapy
  • Bert Vogelstein
    Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center
    For cancer genomics and tumor suppressor genes
  • Robert A. Weinberg
    MIT
    For characterization of human cancer genes
  • Shinya Yamanaka
    Gladstone Institutes and UC San Francisco
    For induced pluripotent stem cells

The Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences is “dedicated to advancing breakthrough research, celebrating scientists and generating excitement about the pursuit of science as a career.” The prize was announced Tuesday at a press briefing hosted by UCSF Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann, MD, MPH on the University’s Mission Bay campus.

Each award, “recognizing excellence in research aimed at curing intractable diseases and extending human life,”is for $3 million – more than twice the amount bestowed on winners of the Nobel Prize.

“We are thrilled to support scientists who think big, take risks and have made a significant impact on our lives. These scientists should be household names and heroes in society,” said co-sponsor Anne Wojcicki, who co-founded the genetic testing company, 23andMe.

Wojcicki was joined by Yuri Milner, founder of the internet company Mail.ru Group, and who last year launched a similar physics prize; Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg; Zuckerberg’s wife, Priscilla Chan, MD; and Google co-founder Sergey Brin in establishing the new award.

Shinya Yamanaka, MD – a professor of anatomy at UCSF, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes, and director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application at University of Kyoto – is among the 11 scientists named to receive a $3 million prize. Yamanaka is being recognized for his trailblazing work on induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, seen by many scientists as a route to tissue regeneration for failing organs.

Yamanaka shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with John Gurdon, PhD, of the Gurdon Institute in Cambridge, England.

Shinya Yamanaka, MD, PhD

Shinya Yamanaka, MD, PhD. Photo by Chris Goodfellow/Gladstone Institutes

The prize is awarded for “past achievements in the field of life sciences, with the aim of providing the recipients with more freedom and opportunity to pursue even greater future accomplishments,” according to the prize foundation.

Arthur D. Levinson, PhD, chairman of Apple and former CEO of Genentech – and once a UCSF postdoctoral fellow who worked with UCSF Nobel Prize laureates J. Michael Bishop, MD, and Harold Varmus, MD – chairs the foundation’s board.

“I believe this new prize will shine a light on the extraordinary achievements of the outstanding minds in the field of life sciences, enhance medical innovation, and ultimately become a platform for recognizing future discoveries,” Levinson said. “I also want to thank our founding sponsors, Sergey Brin, Anne Wojcicki, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan and Yuri Milner. Without their contribution, this prize would not have been possible.”

Like Levinson, Yamanaka also received early scientific training from UCSF faculty, as a postdoctoral fellow at the Gladstone Institutes. Two other prize recipients, Napoleone Ferrara, PhD, of UC San Diego, and Charles Sawyers, MD, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York – both of whom made major discoveries that led to new, targeted cancer therapies – also were trained at UCSF.

The Life Sciences Breakthrough Prize is announced at UCSF in San Francisco, Cali

UCSF Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann, center, talks backstage at the Breakthrough Prize press conference with sponsors of the award. From left, Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Russian Internet entrepreneur Yuri Milner, Desmond-Hellmann and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Cornelia Bargmann, PhD, a former professor and Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator at UCSF, now with the Rockefeller University in New York, will receive the prize in recognition of her studies of the genetics underlying neural circuits and behavior.

While 11 scientists were named as inaugural prize winners, the foundation stated that it plans to name five winners annually in future years. The prize winners also will serve on the foundation’s selection committee to choose recipients of future awards.

Photos by Deanne Fitzmaurice/Breakthrough Prize