- Akira Endo (biochemist)
Nihongo|Dr Akira Endo|遠藤 章|Endō Akira|extra=born
14 November 1933 is aJapan ese biochemist whose work on fungi andcholesterol led to the development of the highly successful class ofstatin drugs. He was awarded the 22ndJapan Prize (together withclimatologist John T. Houghton ) in 2006 for his achievements,The Science and Technology Foundation of Japan. [http://www.japanprize.jp/prize/2006/e2_endo.htm Japan Prize official release] , accessed21 June 2006 ] and in 2008 theLasker Award .Biography
Endo was born on a farm in Northern Japan and had an interest in fungi even when young, being an admirer of
Alexander Fleming .Landers, Peter. How One Scientist Intrigued by Molds Found First Statin. "Wall Street Journal"9 January 2006 .] He obtained a BA atTohoku University (Faculty of Agriculture) in Sendai in 1957 and a PhD in biochemistry at the same university in 1966. From 1957 to 1978 he worked as a research fellow at chemical companySankyo Co. ; initially he worked on fungal enzymes for processingfruit juice . Successful discoveries in this field gained him the credit to spend two years at theAlbert Einstein College of Medicine as a research associate 1966-1968), working oncholesterol .His most important work in the 1970s was on fungal metabolites and their influence on
cholesterol synthesis. He hypothesised that fungi used chemicals to ward off parasitic organisms by inhibiting cholesterol synthesis, as this is essential for the manufacture ofergosterol , a cell wall component. 6,000 compounds were studied, of which three metabolites from "Penicillium citrinum " showed an effect. [cite journal|first=Akira|last=Endo|coauthors=Kuroda M., Tsujita Y.|title=ML-236A, ML-236B, and ML-236C, new inhibitors of cholesterogenesis produced by Penicillium citrinium|journal=Journal of Antibiotics (Tokyo)|year=1976|month=December|volume=29|issue=12|pages=1346–8|pmid=1010803] One of them,mevastatin (ML-236B), was the first member of thestatin class of drugs. These studies led to the development of other statins and discovery into the metabolism ofcholesterol .He was an associate professor and later a full professor (1986-) at the
Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology between 1979 and 1997, and after his official retirement became the president ofBiopharm Research Laboratories .Recognition
He was awarded several other prizes during his career:
* Young Investigator Award in agricultural chemistry (Japan), 1966
* Heinrich Wieland Prize for the discovery of the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (West Germany), 1987
* Toray Science and Technology Prize (Japan), 1988
* Warren Alpert Foundation Prize (Harvard Medical School , U.S.A), 2000
*Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research , 2008Apart from the recognition, Endo never derived financial benefit from his discovery, despite the fact that statins are amongst the most widely-prescribed medications.
References
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