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Dr. Goldstein is Professor of Molecular Genetics and
Chairman of the Department of Molecular Genetics at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical School in Dallas. He and his long-time colleague, Dr.
Michael S. Brown, have worked together for the last 30 years on the genetics and
regulation of cholesterol metabolism. Their discovery of the LDL receptor as the
major molecule regulating cholesterol metabolism and its genetic disruption in
the human disease familial hypercholesterolemia have been recognized by their
receipt of numerous awards, including the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
(1985), the Albert D. Lasker Award in Basic Medical Research (1985), and the
U.S. National Medal of Science (1988). More recently, Drs. Goldstein and Brown's
discovered the SREBP family of membrane-bound transcription factors and the
elucidation of the proteolytic pathway by which the SREBPs become activated to
regulate lipid metabolism. Dr. Goldstein also received the Albany Prize in
Medicine and Biomedical Research (2003). Currently, he is a member of the Board
of Trustees of The Rockefeller University and the Board of Trustees of the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He serves on several scientific committees for
academic institutions and he is a member of the Science Advisory Boards of
Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, FivePrime and ARMGO, and a former consultant to
Merck, Schering Plough and Amgen. Dr. Goldstein is also Chairman of the Albert
Lasker Medical Research Awards Jury.
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