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German science and technology award
Ernst Schering
The Ernst Schering Prize is awarded annually by the
Ernst Schering Foundation for especially outstanding basic research in the fields of medicine, biology or chemistry anywhere in the world. Established in 1991 by the Ernst Schering Research Foundation,
[1] and named after the German apothecary and industrialist,
Ernst Christian Friedrich Schering , who founded the Schering Corporation, the prize is now worth €50,000.
[2]
[3]
Recipients
Source:
Schering Foundation
1992
Peter H. Seeburg [
de ] , (Center for Molecular Biology,
University of Heidelberg , Germany)
1993
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard , (
Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in Tübingen, Germany)
1994
Bert Vogelstein , (Oncology Center,
Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, Maryland, US)
1995
Yasutomi Nishizuka , (
Kobe University , Japan)
1996
Judah Folkman , (
Harvard Medical School ,
Harvard University , Boston, US)
1997
Johann Mulzer , (Institute for Organic Chemistry,
University of Vienna , Austria)
1998
Ilme Schlichting , (
Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology in Dortmund, Germany)
1999
Michael Berridge , (
Babraham Institute in Cambridge, UK)
2000
Takao Shimizu [
ja ;
de ] , (
University of Tokyo , Japan)
2001
Kyriacos Nicolaou , (
University of California, San Diego , California, and
The Scripps Research Institute , La Jolla, California, US)
2002
Ian Wilmut , (
The Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, UK)
2003
Svante Pääbo , (
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany)
2004
Ronald McKay [
de ] , (
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), Bethesda, Maryland, US)
2005
Thomas Tuschl , (Laboratory of RNA Molecular Biology,
Rockefeller University , New York)
2006
Wolfgang Baumeister , (
Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany)
2007
Carolyn Bertozzi , (
University of California , Berkeley, US)
2008
Klaus Rajewsky , (
Harvard Medical School , Boston, US)
2009
Rudolf Jaenisch , (
Whitehead Institute , Cambridge, Massachusetts, US)
[4]
2010
Marc Feldmann and Sir
Ravinder Maini , (Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology at Imperial College London, UK)
2011
Bert W. O'Malley , (Tom Thompson Distinguished Service Professor and Chair of Molecular and Cellular Biology at
Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas)
2012
Matthias Mann , (
Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany)
2013
Frank Kirchhoff [
de ] , (Institute of Molecular Virology at the
Ulm University Medical Center in Ulm, Germany)
2014
Magdalena Götz , (Director of the Institute of Stem Cell Research at the Helmholtz Zentrum München and chair of Physiological Genomics at the
University of Munich (LMU) in Munich, Germany)
[5]
2015
David MacMillan , (Professor of Chemistry at
Princeton University , US).
[6]
2016
Franz-Ulrich Hartl , (
Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany).
2017
Elly Tanaka , (Senior Scientist at
Research Institute of Molecular Pathology in Vienna, Austria)
[7]
2018
Bonnie L. Bassler , (Princeton University, New Jersey)
2019
Patrick Cramer , (Director at the
Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen)
[8]
[9]
2020
Jens Claus Brüning [
de ] , (Director at the (
Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research [
de ] in Cologne)
[10]
[11]
2021
Aviv Regev , (Head of
Genentech Research and Early Development in South San Francisco, US)
[12]
2022
Gisbert Schneider [
Wikidata ] (Professor of Computer-Assisted Drug Design at the Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences at ETH Zurich and director of the Singapore-ETH Center)
[13]
2023
Matthias Tschöp (CEO and scientific director at
Helmholtz Zentrum München , Germany. Alexander von Humboldt Professor at the
Technical University of Munich (TUM), and Helmholtz Vice President of Health Research
[14]
See also
References
This article has been translated from the equivalent article on German Wikipedia
External links