Meyenburg Prize
The Meyenburg Prize is awarded for outstanding achievements in cancer research by the Meyenburg Foundation in support of the German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg (DKFZ), which is the largest biomedical research institution in Germany. The prize has been awarded annually since 1981, and currently has an honorarium of €50,000.[1]
List of Recipients
Source: Meyenburg Award Winners
- 1981 Werner W. Franke
- 1982/1983 Holger Kirchner and Volker Schirrmacher
- 1984 Lutz Gissmann
- 1985 Volker Sturm
- 1986 Karin Mölling
- 1987 Mary Osborn
- 1988 Elisabeth Gateff
- 1989 Peter Herrlich
- 1990 Rainer Storb
- 1991 Hans-Georg Rammensee
- 1992 Walter Birchmeier
- 1993 Johannes Gerdes
- 1994 Gert Riethmüller
- 1995 David P. Lane
- 1996 Peter H. Krammer
- 1997 Patrick S. Moore and Yuan Chang
- 1998 Richard D. Wood
- 1999 Carl-Henrik Heldin
- 2000 Matthias Mann
- 2001 Shoichiro Tsukita
- 2002 Andrew Fire
- 2004 Erich A. Nigg
- 2005 Thomas Tuschl
- 2006 Elizabeth Blackburn
- 2007 Shinya Yamanaka
- 2008 Hans Clevers
- 2009 Brian Druker
- 2010 Alan Ashworth[2]
- 2011 Stefan Hell[3]
- 2012 Charles Mullighan[4]
- 2013 Nathanael Gray
- 2014 Peter Campbell (Sanger Institute)[5]
- 2015 Ton Schumacher[6]
- 2016 Emmanuelle Charpentier
- 2017 Nitzan Rosenfeld (Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute)
- 2019 Benjamin L. Ebert
- 2020/2021 Uğur Şahin, Özlem Türeci, Katalin Karikó
See also
References
- ^ Meyenburg Recipients List, in German
- ^ "2010 Meyenburg Award for Discoverer of BRCA 2 Breast Cancer Gene". www.dkfz.de.
- ^ "From microscopy to nanoscopy: 2011 Meyenburg Award goes to Stefan Hell". www.dkfz.de.
- ^ "Spurensuche im Erbgut von Blutkrebs: Meyenburg-Preis 2012 geht an Charles G. Mullighan". www.dkfz.de.
- ^ "Das Krebs-Erbgut im Kreuzverhör: Meyenburg-Preis 2014 geht an Peter Campbell". German Cancer Research Center. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ^ "How the immune system recognizes cancer: 2015 Meyenburg Award for Ton Schumacher". German Cancer Research Center. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
External links